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Posts Tagged ‘Leaf Green’

Wakarusa Adds: Tipper Kraak & Smaak, Two Fresh

Wakarusa Adds: Tipper, Kraak & Smaak, Two Fresh, Pete Francis & More

Wakarusa has announced the following additions to our 2010 lineup: Tipper, Kraak & Smaak, Two Fresh, Pete Francis, Big Smith (Gospel Grass Set), Shannon McNally & Hot Sauce, Matthew Mayfield, Deadman Flats, Rocket Science, Spankalicious, C quence, EZ Brothers, Miss J, Defunct ! vs. Shabb Ruffcut, Wolf-E-Wolf, D Jason, Johnny C, Bill Pile, Jeremy Word, Dead PA, Clandestine, Tim Hjersted, Alan Paul, Funk, Philosophy, Justin Sane, Dave Brock, Doohickey, Jake Jackson, Astral Landscapes, Randy Soeung, Mary Jane, Monad Kiysuren a.k.a. TURK, Echobase, Indofin, Wes Kirkpatrick and Bootleg.

These artists will join the already announced artists for Wakarusa 2010.

Wakarusa 2009 by Sands

Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee (2 sets – special late night set!)

STS9

The Disco Biscuits

The Black Keys

Robert Randolph and the Family Band

7 Walkers feat Papa Mali and Bill Kreutzmann

State Radio

Dub Tribe Soundsystem

Fishbone

Mark Farina

Todd Snider

The Mother Hips

Ott

Tortured Soul

Future Rock

Spacemen

MiMosa

Pimps of Joytime (2 sets)

That One Guy (2 sets)

ekoostik hookah

Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band

Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad

Great American Taxi

Constellations

The Dirty Heads

Lynx & Jamie Janover

Jay Nash (2 sets)

Supervillains

The Moondoogies

The Bridge

Backyard Tire Fire (2 sets)

Dirtfoot (2 sets)

The Heavy Pets

Spoonfed Tribe

Sunshine Jones

Kinetix

Truckstop Honeymoon (2 sets)

Oakhurst (2 sets)

Ben Miller Band

Somasphere

Radio Hiro
Slightly Stoopid

John Butler Trio

Blues Traveler

Zappa Plays Zappa

Bassnectar

Railroad Earth

The Machine performs Pink Floyd

JJ Grey & MOFRO

Lotus

Rebelution

ALO

Tea Leaf Green

BoomBox

Black Joe Lewis

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

EOTO

James Zabiela

Split Lip Rayfield

Hayes Carll

Sub Swara

Stephen Kellogg & the Sixers

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band

Trampled by Turtles

Wookiefoot

Mishka

Big Gigantic

Truth & Salvage Co.

Fort Knox Five

Mountain Sprout

Band of Heathens

Last Waltz Ensemble

Cash’d Out

Earl Greyhound

Bluetech

Uglysuit

Passafire

Simplified

Hoots & Hellmouth

Resident Anti-Hero

Set to run June 3-6 at Mulberry Mountain near Ozark, Arkansas, Wakarusa 2010 will feature over 100 bands and artists performing on six stages.

Tickets for Wakarusa 2010 are available here.

For more on Wakarusa see our 2009 coverage here.


7 Walkers | 04.09.10 | GAMH | San Francisco

Images by: Susan J. Weiand

7 Walkers

04.09.10 :: Great American Music Hall :: San Francisco CA

Legendary Grateful Dead drummer Bill Kreutzmann and guitarist/vocalist Papa Mali‘s new band 7 Walkers has embarked on its first tour ever. Though Reed Mathis appears on the album due later this year, due to touring commitments with his other band Tea Leaf Green, New Orleans’ George Porter Jr. joined the band on bass for this run of shows. 7 Walkers is rounded out by multi-instrumentalist Matt Hubbard (Willie Nelson and Friends).

In addition to a batch of brand new Robert Hunter songs (Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan lyricist) and originals the band penned together, the 7 Walkers’ set at San Francisco’s Great American Music Hall featured some choice covers, deep NOLA grooves and several chestnuts from the Grateful Dead songbook.

Setlist

Set I: Jam > The Deal > Death Don’t Have No Mercy, Bottle Up and Go, Evangeline > The Seven Walkers, Turn On Your Lovelight > George and Billy > Turn On Your Lovelight > Hey Pocky Way > Iko – Iko > Shoe Fly

Set II: Bertha > Warf Rat, Junco Partner > New Orleans Crawl, I know you Rider, Sue from Bogalusa, The Other One Jam > George and Billy > Sugaree > Not Fade Away

Setlist courtesy of archive.org

var siteRoot=”http://www.jambase.com”;var newPhotoIndex=”0″;$(document).ready( function() { $(“#GalleryWidget”).load(siteRoot+”/Photos/Widget.aspx?galleryID=17″);}); 7 Walkers | Great American Music Hall | San Francisco, CA 7 Walkers, the new band put together by drummer Bill Kreutzmann and guitarist/vocalist Papa Mali, perform their first set of shows ever and bring New Orleans bass legend George Porter Jr. along for the party… View Photos

7 Walkers Tour Dates :: 7 Walkers News :: 7 Walkers Concert Reviews

JamBase | San Francisco

Go See Live Music!


All Good Adds TLG: Old Crow, Bridge, Pets & More

OLD CROW MEDICINE SHOW, TEA LEAF GREEN, THE BRIDGE, DONNA JEAN GODCHAUX & MORE ADDED TO FEST

Already Confirmed Performers Include FURTHUR, WIDESPEAD PANIC, UMPHREY’S MCGEE, YMSB & MORE

Thousands Flock to the Rolling Mountains of Wild Wonderful West Virginia July 8-11

Today, the All Good Music Festival adds another robust array of artists to the four-night musical celebration taking place July 8-11 at Marvin’s Mountaintop in Masontown, WV. The 14th Annual festival is the musical highlight of peak summer for the thousands gathering for more than 40 hours of music from the jam scene’s biggest bands. The latest additions include: Old Crow Medicine Show, Tea Leaf Green, The Bridge, Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/Jeff Mattson, The Heavy Pets and The Pimps of Joytime.

All Good 2009 by Pusey

Confirmed 2010 All Good Music Festival Artists:
FURTHUR featuring PHIL LESH & BOB WEIR
Widespread Panic
Umphrey’s McGee
Yonder Mountain String Band
Derek Trucks and Susan Tedeschi Band
Old Crow Medicine Show
Dark Star Orchestra
George Clinton & Parliament Funkadelic
Keller Williams & the Added Bonus
Bassnectar
Femi Kuti & the Positive Force
Lotus
SOJA
Tea Leaf Green
Railroad Earth
Dr. Dog
Rebelution
The New Deal
The Bridge
Perpetual Groove
Garage a Trois
Everyone Orchestra
Cornmeal
The New Mastersounds
The Travelin’ McCourys
Fort Knox Five
Donna Jean Godchaux Band w/ Jeff Mattson
The Heavy Pets
Papadosio
Dr. Didg
Lee Boys
The Macpodz
The Pimps of Joytime

For the first time ever the All Good Festival will be offering a Four Day Pass. In addition to three days of music in the main concert area, this will include admission to the Thursday Throw-down on the Grassroots stage July 8 with Dark Star Orchestra, The New Deal, Fort Knox Five and more, plus an extra night of camping.


All tickets are on sale now through http://allgood.musictoday.com or charge by phone by at 1-800-594-TIXX. The Advanced 4-Day Passes (Thursday-Monday) are going fast and are currently available for $169, $55 off of the gate price.

For more on All Good see our 2009 review here.


7 Walkers Tour: Papa Mali, Bill Kreutzmann, George Porter Jr.

NEW PROJECT FEATURING FRESH ROBERT HUNTER LYRICS
HITS THE ROAD

Bill Kreutzmann by Chad Smith

Legendary drummer and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann, together with funky bluesman and voodoo electronic pioneer Papa Mali, officially unveil 7 Walkers‘ spring plans. 7 Walkers, which also features bass virtuoso Reed Mathis (Tea Leaf Green, JFJO) and multi-instrumentalist Matt Hubbard (Willie Nelson and Friends), will stop at select markets and festivals through out the country, all in anticipation of a new album release. The complete list of currently confirmed tour dates is included below.

7 Walkers recently spent time at an Austin, Texas studio, recording an album to be released later this year. In addition to a brand-new batch of Robert Hunter (Grateful Dead and Bob Dylan lyricist) originals that were co-written with the band, the new album offers up favorites from the Grateful Dead repertoire, Papa Mali originals, and some New Orleans and Southern songbook interpretations. Overall, the result is a fiery and funky collection of tunes that quite brilliantly capture the unique collaboration between these two very different musical shamans.

Bill Kreutzmann (who played every show in the Grateful Dead’s illustrious 30 year career as well as The Dead incarnations since) first met funky Papa Mali at a festival in 2008. Bill recalls in a recent interview, “We first met at the Oregon Country Fair last year. He was the headliner on the main stage, and I sat there and watched him and went, ‘This guy’s for real man, I like this guy.’ Then we met, after that he came over to my trailer that I was staying in and you couldn’t separate us, we talked for hours. It was just one of those natural things, you know? You can’t plan it; You can’t make it happen. And then we started playing together.”

Live audio recordings of the 7 Walkers can be heard at the newly re-launched www.billkreutzmann.com.

Meanwhile, at nugs.net, fans can now download live BK3 recordings from their 2009 Colorado shows. Another potent Kreutzmann musical project, BK3 first toured in 2008 and featured a rotating lineup including such players as guitarist Scott Murawski (Max Creek) and bassists James “Hutch” Hutchinson (Bonnie Raitt), Oteil Burbridge (Allman Brothers) and Mike Gordon (Phish).

Kreutzmann is also working to support the efforts of University of California at Santa Cruz, who has committed to helping to archive all things Grateful Dead. As Kreutzmann explains, “I am incredibly happy that the kind archivists at UC Santa Cruz understand the social value of [the Grateful Dead's] priceless archive, and its hallowed meaning to our most beloved ‘Dead Heads.’ Without the care it is now going to receive, these treasures would be lost.”

7 Walkers Spring/Summer Tour Dates

(Please note: Guest bass player George Porter Jr. will perform these dates with 7 Walkers)

Tuesday, April 6 Sierra Nevada Brewing Co., Big Room Chico CA
Wednesday, April 7 Red Fox Eureka CA
Thursday, April 8 Crystal Bay Club Crown Room Crystal Bay NV
Friday, April 9 Great American Music Hall San Francisco CA
Saturday, April 10 Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz CA
Friday, April 16 Spirit of Suwanee Music Park Live Oak FL
Saturday, April 17 The Salt Lick Driftwood TX
Friday, April 30 Mahalia Jackson Theatre New Orleans, LA
Thursday, June 3 Wakarusa Festival Ozark AR
Friday, June 11 Sonoma County Fairgrounds Santa Rosa CA

7 Walkers Tour Dates :: 7 Walkers News :: 7 Walkers Concert Reviews


Wakarusa Adds: WSP, UM Black Keys, Mother Hips

WAKARUSA ANNOUNCES MORE ARTISTS FOR 2010 FESTIVAL

With the incredible diversity and depth of its lineup, Wakarusa 2010 continues the tradition of the previous six events. Set to run June 3-6 at Mulberry Mountain near Ozark, Arkansas, Wakarusa 2010 will feature over 100 bands and artists performing on six stages. The Wakarusa 2010 fans will enjoy everything from funk to bluegrass and rock to reggae.

Below are more great artists set to appear at Wakarusa 2010 – these artists will join the already announced 40+ artists in rocking Mulberry Mountain.

Wakarusa 2009 by Sands

Widespread Panic

Umphrey’s McGee (2 sets – special late night set!)

The Black Keys

Robert Randolph and the Family Band

7 Walkers feat Papa Mali and Bill Kreutzmann

State Radio

Dub Tribe Soundsystem

Fishbone

Mark Farina

Todd Snider

The Mother Hips

Ott

Tortured Soul

Future Rock

Spacemen

MiMosa

Pimps of Joytime (2 sets)

That One Guy (2 sets)

ekoostik hookah

Yo Mama’s Big Fat Booty Band

Giant Panda Guerilla Dub Squad

Great American Taxi

Constellations

The Dirty Heads

Lynx & Jamie Janover

Jay Nash (2 sets)

Supervillains

The Moondoogies

The Bridge

Backyard Tire Fire (2 sets)

Dirtfoot (2 sets)

The Heavy Pets

Spoonfed Tribe

Sunshine Jones

Kinetix

Truckstop Honeymoon (2 sets)

Oakhurst (2 sets)

Ben Miller Band

Somasphere

Radio Hiro

These artists join the previously announced list that follows:

STS9

The Disco Biscuits

Slightly Stoopid

John Butler Trio

Blues Traveler

Zappa Plays Zappa

Bassnectar

Railroad Earth

The Machine performs Pink Floyd

JJ Grey & MOFRO

Lotus

Rebelution

ALO

Tea Leaf Green

BoomBox

Black Joe Lewis

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

EOTO

James Zabiela

Split Lip Rayfield

Hayes Carll

Sub Swara

Stephen Kellogg & the Sixers

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band

Trampled by Turtles

Wookiefoot

Mishka

Big Gigantic

Truth & Salvage Co.

Fort Knox Five

Mountain Sprout

Band of Heathens

Last Waltz Ensemble

Cash’d Out

Earl Greyhound

Bluetech

Uglysuit

Passafire

Simplified

Hoots & Hellmouth

Resident Anti-Hero

Tickets for Wakarusa 2010 are available here.

For more on Wakarusa see our 2009 coverage here.


Tea Leaf Green | 01.27 | St. Louis

Words & Images by: Neil Salsich

Tea Leaf Green :: 01.27.10 :: Blueberry Hill :: St. Louis, MO

Tea Leaf Green :: 01.27 :: St. Louis, MO

Great music has the uncanny ability to make you feel like you are exactly where you are supposed to be. That’s its blessing and its curse – the in-the-moment current that sweeps the listener away for a few precious hours and drops them off at reality’s doorstep when it’s all over. Standing amidst a lively crowd at St. Louis’ Blueberry Hill, hearing Trevor Garrod sing “One Reason” as the scene’s most gently powerful rock & roll band began to paint their nightly masterpiece, that’s exactly how I felt. The clarity of the music imparted clarity to the audience, and it was hard not to feel completely at ease.

Granted, the band’s job was a little easier given the mood established by opening act Elmwood, who sated the room with an explosive set. I often find myself bemoaning the presence of an opening band – simply craving the music of the headliner – and it was a treat to have the Nashville quartet prove me wrong. Jaw dropping percussion, fiery and passionate sax playing, slick bass work and a charismatic frontman made up this fantastically tight band. Singer Ruston Kelly‘s voice was draped in a gravel-coated soulfulness that planted images of a David Gray-fronted jam band into my head.

But even the most talented of openers can’t satisfy a crowd’s enthusiasm for the headliner, and as Tea Leaf Green launched into “These Two Chairs,” that enthusiasm was undoubtedly released. Fists flew into the air in unison with Garrod’s voice as he sang the band’s battle call: “And the kids, they just don’t understand/ but they’ve got a rock & roll band!” The crowd sank with ease into the music as the band continued into “One Reason.” I’m not sure whether it’s coincidence or mission, but TLG certainly has found their convention. They work with rock & roll’s basic stuff – grit, soul, twang, rhythm & blues – grappling with it, reworking it and wringing it out for all it’s got.

Josh Clark :: 01.27 :: St. Louis, MO

They catch a lot of flak as musicians in a scene where the boundaries of tonal, melodic and rhythmic structure are consistently tested, expanded and completely broken. Though that approach is what makes so much of live music thrilling and entertaining as a fan, there must also exist an opposite pole where rock music can retreat to its roots and recycle its initial spark all over again. As much as they’ve embraced change, in part due to the addition of bass player Reed Mathis, it’s comforting to know that their music and mission as a band is not ephemeral; they are committed to their craft and their purpose. Their sound is at once epic and roots-based, anthemic and down-to-earth, at home alongside the canons of Neil Young, Tom Petty and the Grateful Dead, the latter of whom they share with another crucial and masterfully crafted ability – getting the crowd moving. As much of TLG’s magic stems from their emotive lyrics and passionate songcraft, just as much is found in their role as a dance band. A skeptic simply needs to experience a live “Franz Hanzerbeak,” “Sex in the70′s,” or as the St. Louis crowd was lucky enough to catch, a “Precious Stone” > “Don’t Curse at the Night” sequence.

As individuals, the group was a thrill to witness. Axeman Josh Clark owned the stage, strutting around his small portion with swagger and sass. His guitar playing was phenomenal and contradicted various critics who write him off as technically shallow. Though his phrasing is heavily rooted in classic rock, the emotion in every bend, snap and strum of his Les Paul shone through as truly his own. His licks were savory, soulful and thick, spurring mental references to a young Dickey Betts; I suspect his melodic sense owes much to the Allmans and the rest of southern rock’s royal family.

Reed Mathis :: 01.27 :: St. Louis, MO

With over a year as a full time member under his belt, it’s safe to say Reed Mathis has fully assimilated into the mix. A year ago (in Columbia, MO – this reviewer’s last TLG show) he surely wasn’t displaying the confidence, energy and adventurous spirit that he brought onstage this time. The shaggy redheaded virtuoso added a distinct flair, fullness and curiosity to the songs. His vast musical knowledge and experience with countless musical projects is a welcome benefit, especially in conjunction with drummer Scott Rager, who delivered a set’s worth of precise and pulsing percussive sealant to the musical dialogue between Mathis, Clark, and Garrod.

Admittedly the core of the group, it’s Garrod’s slick hands and even slicker pen that gives the band the upper hand. In a live setting, it’s thrilling to hear his voice ring clear over the pulsing mayhem of a rock band in full force. Moreover, his songwriting skills are fantastic; he possesses the oft sought yet rarely achieved ability – Neil Young and Bob Marley come to mind – to string together the simplest of words into the most moving of sentiments and pair them with utterly infectious melodies. Top it all off with one hell of a set of hands, and you’ve the recipe for rock & roll euphoria. Whether it was on a beautiful “Earth and Sky,” a jubilant “Ride Together” or a downright nasty “Precious Stone,” Garrod’s fingers flew nimbly over the keys and sent constant streams of shimmering, sparkling notes over the rest of the boys’ rock solid outfit. As a spectator nicely commented, “He’s either shining on the keys or screamin’ on the organ.”

Seeing this band, one can’t escape feelings of hope, happiness and freedom. The purity to their approach and obvious passion for their craft exuded these three sentiments throughout the night. What’s amazing about a band like this – and a hallmark of any great live band – is their complete surrender to the show. I mused on the fact that though this tiny club in St. Louis couldn’t have seemed farther away for a band from San Francisco, they played as if it was a sold out hometown crowd. Garrod was even so enthusiastic that at one point near the show’s end he completely flipped over his stool! It makes an audience feel appreciated, and by putting on a hell of a show for a few hundred music-hungry Midwesterners, that’s what a band like this does best.

Tea Leaf Green :: 01.27.10 :: Blueberry Hill :: St. Louis, MO
These Two Chairs, One Reason, Earth and Sky, Papa’s in the Backroom, Without A Broom, Innocence, Not Fit, Standing Still, Hello Jane, Precious Stone, Don’t Curse at the Night, Ride Together, Fallen Angel, Let Us Go, Drink of Streams, Country Seduction, Easy To Be Your Lover, Freedom
E: Don’t Let It Down, The Garden (Part III)

Tea Leaf Green is on tour now; dates available here.

JamBase | Riding Together
Go See Live Music!


Wakarusa Initial Lineup

Wakarusa Initial Lineup

Wakarusa 2010 continues the tradition of the previous 6 events with over 100 bands and artists performing on 6 stages. Set to go down June 3-6 at Mulberry Mountain in Ozark, Arkansas, Wakarusa 2010 fans will enjoy everything from funk to bluegrass and rock to reggae.

Offered here are 40 of the more than 100 artists set to appear at Wakarusa 2010 – many more artists to be announced in the coming weeks.

INITIAL LINEUP

Wakarusa 2009 by Sands

STS9

The Disco Biscuits

Slightly Stoopid

John Butler Trio

Blues Traveler

Zappa Plays Zappa

Bassnectar

Railroad Earth

The Machine performs Pink Floyd

JJ Grey & MOFRO

Lotus

Rebelution

ALO

Tea Leaf Green

BoomBox

Black Joe Lewis

Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk

EOTO

James Zabiela

Split Lip Rayfield

Hayes Carll

Sub Swara

Stephen Kellogg & the Sixers

Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band

Trampled by Turtles

Wookiefoot

Mishka

Big Gigantic

Truth & Salvage Co.

Fort Knox Five

Mountain Sprout

Band of Heathens

Last Waltz Ensemble

Cash’d Out

Earl Greyhound

Bluetech

Uglysuit

Passafire

Simplified

Hoots & Hellmouth

Resident Anti-Hero

Tickets for Wakarusa 2010 are available here.

For more on Wakarusa see our 2009 coverage here.


Alberta Cross Headlining Tour

ALBERTA CROSS TOUR IN SUPPORT OF HIGHLY ACCLAIMED DEBUT BROKEN SIDE OF TIME

HEADLINING DATES CONFIRMED FOR JANUARY/FEBRUARY

“The seismic guitars and high vocals look to My Morning Jacket, Kings of Leon and Crazy Horse… but Alberta Cross sets aside those American bands’ redemptive undercurrents of blues and gospel; instead it plunges into the very English despair of bands like Pink Floyd.” — The New York Times

“Channeling Neil Young… the sound of deliverance.” — Esquire

Alberta Cross

Alberta Cross kicks off a nationwide tour this January. Supported by San Antonio-based folk-rockers Hacienda, Alberta Cross will be headlining venues such as Bowery Ballroom in New York, Schubas in Chicago and Troubadour in Los Angeles. They are touring in support of their much-anticipated ATO Records debut, Broken Side of Time, which is receiving widespread acclaim. The New York Times applauds their “British take on Southern rock,” and NPR declares them “…familiar and refreshing …Alberta Cross has taken incredible strides to earn global recognition.” Likewise, they were recently featured as a Breaking Artist in Rolling Stone, which praises them for “combining wind tunnels of bent guitar riffs and distorted power chords with the haunting melodies of rural American music. It’s all topped by Ericson Stakee’s sweet, high-lonesome voice, which recalls both Jim James and Neil Young.”

Broken side of Time arrives on the heels of their acclaimed EP The Thief & the Heartbreaker, which earned the band U.K. touring slots with Oasis, The Shins and Bat For Lashes, and widespread critical praise, including PopMatters, which declared, “The seven-song EP is one of the best you’ll be lucky enough to pick up, resembling a full album’s quality but leaving one wanting a lot more.” It also follows a summer of festivals and U.K. dates, including noteworthy performances at Bonnaroo, Coachella, Glastonbury and more.

Tour Dates

11/25/09 Wed Gaswerk Winterthur, SWI

11/26/09 Thu Le Botanique Brussels, BEL

11/28/09 Sat Rotown Rotterdam, NL

11/29/09 Sun Magnet Berlin, GER

12/01/09 Tue Molotow Hamburg, GER

12/02/09 Wed Vox Hall Arhus, DK

12/03/09 Thu John Dee Oslo, NO

12/04/09 Fri Debaser Malmo, SE

12/05/09 Sat Debaser Stockholm, SE

12/27/09 Sun Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

12/28/09 Mon Higher Ground (Ballroom) Burlington, VT (w/ Grace Potter and the Nocturnals)

01/11/10 Mon Casbah San Diego, CA

01/12/10 Tue Detroit Bar Costa Mesa, CA

01/14/10 Thu The Troubadour West Hollywood, CA

01/15/10 Fri Muddy Waters Santa Barbara, CA

01/16/10 Sat Bottom of the Hill San Francisco, CA

01/18/10 Mon Mississippi Studios Portland, OR

01/19/10 Tue Chop Suey Seattle, WA

01/23/10 Sat The Larimer Lounge Denver, CO

01/27/10 Wed 400 Bar Minneapolis, MN

01/29/10 Fri Schubas Chicago, IL

01/30/10 Sat The Basement Columbus, OH

02/02/10 Tue Jefferson Theater Charlottesville, VA (w/ Tea Leaf Green)

02/03/10 Wed Black Cat Washington, DC

02/04/10 Thu Bowery Ballroom New York, NY

02/05/10 Fri The Khyber Philadelphia, PA

For more on Alberta Cross see our exclusive feature/interview here.


Las Tortugas IV | 10.29-11.01 | Yosemite

Words by: Dennis Cook | Images by: Chad Smith

Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead IV :: 10.29.09-11.01.09 :: Evergreen Lodge :: Groveland, CA

Las Tortugas

More days than I care to admit, I find myself empathizing with the Devil, wondering if humanity is, at best, a flawed experiment run amuck. It’s an unattractive perspective but one that’s cropped up for me more and more in recent years as wars, tea-bagging, general pettiness, and greed whittle away at our shared humanity. But it takes only four days each Halloween weekend to bring me around to a considerably more copacetic, hopeful outlook. Turning off Highway 120 onto the ridiculously peaceful, verdant seven mile back road that leads to Evergreen Lodge and Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead music festival one feels some of the world’s weight lift almost instantly. The air is moist and green flourishes wherever your eye falls. Take the road slow and drink it in and the last leg of one’s journey works like an elixir absorbed through the skin. Where you are going is not the “real world” but a happy, highly musical oasis where palpable community, good will, and great times abound. Yes, this is a gathering of bands and fans, but if one fully launches themselves into the experience there’s a chance at something hearteningly humanizing that goes well beyond a badass set or blinding solo, though Tortugas IV had both in abundance.

Thursday, 10.29

One of the striking differences about Tortugas versus most other festivals is how immediate the transformation from workaday existence to exuberant shindig takes place. Thursday here feels like a Saturday at most fests, as the first of many costumes emerges, twinkling lights are strung, pumpkins carved, and seals on whiskey bottles are broken as virtually everyone in attendance stretches out their arms to everyone they see. It may come off as some sort of bunk hippie claptrap but just being in this environment for a short while triggers off a wave of general niceness and hospitality that runs through attendees, performers, and the exceedingly gracious staff that worked their butts off all weekend so the rest of us could revel without a care. Nothing is too far away from anything else, and as you wander past cabins and tents towards the music frothing in the distance you’ll likely be stopped by someone you don’t know and offered a drink, some candy, or all sorts of amusements simply because they felt like being kind and they liked your smile.

Bill Kreutzmann :: Las Tortugas

And don’t just trust me on this. Listen up to Tortugas IV guest of honor Bill Kreutzmann, he of the Grateful Dead, BK3, The Rhythm Devils and more, who performed a couple quite epic sets with pal Papa Mali but also sat in with headliners Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk and Umphrey’s McGee, amongst others. The man was a drumming fool, in the best sense, enlivening everything he touched with both his huge, deeply underrated percussion chops and general fabulous energy. So, Bill, did you have a good time Tortugas?

“Are you kidding? I had a GREAT time. It feels like a party,” says Kreutzmann by phone a few days after the event. “Festivals are really fun because I get to meet the fans. I really love talking to the people face-to-face and let them know I’m a real person and get to know what’s on their minds and what they’re thinking about musically.”

Izabella :: 8:00-9:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

You couldn’t pick a finer main stage opener than Izabella, a continually evolving Northern California unit that oozes positivity anchored to serious chops and strong songwriting. Archetypically “jam band” in nature, they encompass soul, rock, pop, and jazz as if all lived happily in one big bed. Yet, unlike many of their overly eclectic brethren, Izabella keeps refining their sound, which hums with ancestral echoes but ultimately carves their own path. “You all look pretty scary right now,” remarked lead singer-guitarist-percussionist Brian Rogers, “and that’s saying something coming from me.” The lost Village Person, shirtless with a cowboy hat and feather boa, spoke the truth, as the first night’s “Voodoo Circus” theme came to life with clown pants, duppy makeup, and other New Orleans/Ringling Brothers inspired touches. Izabella’s set flowed so seamlessly that one wondered how they’d brought us from a slow prog ascent into country territory and out into full-on funk. There was a real “diamond in the back, sunroof top” feel to some sections, and their cover choices were sublime – a hallmark of Las Tortugas acts overall. Wilco‘s “Handshake Drug” rattled nicely and made Big Light groan because Izabella got to one of their picks first. Michael Jackson – a specter in many setlists – emerged with a solid rendition of “Billie Jean,” and the set concluded with a way above-par stab at Queen‘s “Bohemian Rhapsody,” complete with Wayne and Garth look-alikes rocking onstage with the band. In between originals like “Beauty In The Journey,” a modern descendent of primo ’70s Robin Trower, began our collective elevation in earnest.

Poor Man’s Whiskey :: 9:15-10:15 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

BAG of Trix :: Las Tortugas

If there’s a band that loves getting onstage more than Poor Man’s Whiskey I’ve never met them. Yet, that seemingly sloppy enthusiasm hides some serious players who actually approach their craft with an earnestness that’s endearing. PMW picked up the “groove energy” put out by Izabella and rolled it in something gritty, pumping out their Whiskey-fied version of “Whipping Post” alongside their crowd-pleasing originals. For these guys rock and twang are Siamese twins, and their psychedelisized freak show slapped us around good.

Nathan Moore :: 9:15-10:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Moore was a blessed fixture at Tortugas all weekend, sitting atop tree stumps rolling smokes and dispensing gentle wisdom like the riverbank, backwoods Buddha many of us know him to be. He arrived with his voice a bit tattered, which gave his first performance in Evergreen’s cozy bar a ragged, intense sweetness. He was bound and determined to give the people some songs and stories, and when Moore told us, “The world is really magic/ Nothing could be clearer,” the words sunk deep, a truth penetrating past whatever rigmarole we still had clinging to us from our lives beyond the tall trees, clear moon-filled skies, and moist Yosemite air. Like every time I’ve seen him before, Moore reminded me of the acute power one man with a guitar and the right material can have.

BAG of Trix :: 10:15-11:45 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Three-fourths of ALODave Brogan, Steve Adams and Zach Gill – cemented the festival vibe with a set that overflowed with sunshine and melody. These dudes are just SO enjoyable to take in, and it extends beyond the well-played tunes to their basic personalities, which positively glow through the notes. Dressed in fuzzy, indistinctly animal outfits – except for Gill’s obvious bunny hat – BAG were playful as pups armed with nasty piano stings, undulating bass, and lock-tight drumming. Drawing from their large ALO and solo catalogs, they swung like an alien piano/organ trio on a mission to sonically smooch everyone in the tent. I appreciate their fearlessness with covers because of the utter sincerity with which they render some genuinely unhip material. So, as Gill crooned Wang Chung‘s “Dance Hall Days,” one truly felt compelled to “take your baby by the heel and do the next thing that you feel.” Rarely are serious musicians this playful, and it’s always a treat to see what they have up their sleeves.

New Monsoon :: 11:15-1:00 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Ivan Neville :: Las Tortugas

When one hasn’t heard New Monsoon play in a while – and they’re off the road a lot more of late – it’s a lovely shock to hear their beautiful, wholly unique melange. Regardless of the time between gigs, something special happens when they assemble, and that feeling was particularly strong this night. Able to be merciless or smooth, equally convincing at both, they merge carefully composed songs (with increasingly strong vocals) and genre-busting instrumentals without apology. In some ways NM asks a bit more than your average band of its listeners, but, as stunning renditions of originals like “The Other Side” or covers like Zeps‘ “Poor Tom” showed, surrendering to their current always takes you somewhere cool.

Dumpstaphunk :: 1:00-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

There’s a lot of kinds of funk out there, but if you love, if you crave the stuff that’s sticky ‘n’ stanky, well, there’s none better than Ivan Neville and his hard-nosed bunch. Decked out in robber masks, they launched into a ferocious performance that gathered up ALL the loose booty in a five-mile radius. On their best nights – and this was surely one of them – funk is a mission for this band, and their pursuit of it is exhilarating. If you were able to keep your limbs from flailing rhythmically during this set I’d suggest you pick up a defibrillator pronto. What further separates Dumpsta from the pack is how everything isn’t bullet fast (or obviously derived from touchstones like Funkadelic, James Brown or Sly Stone), as exhibited by their molasses slow ease into a blinding cover of the Stones’ “Sympathy For The Devil” highlighted by Ian Neville‘s jagged guitar cuts and the focused, endlessly exciting drumming of Raymond Weber. Their vocals, as a group, have matured, so it’s not just Ivan rockin’ the mic, and they’ve developed into excellent showmen, particularly the winking, leaping Tony Hall, who switched between bass and guitar with ease all evening. Towards the end of the set, they took us to church, Ivan exhorting us to gather up all the crap and trouble and worry and stress we’d brought into the woods with us and “put it in the dumpsta.” It’s a regular bit but there was a holy roller intensity here that made hundreds shout, “Put it in the dumpsta!” over and over and over in a way that really did liberate us.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of Las Tortugas…

Friday, 10.30

Las Tortugas

We woke to bucolic weather, hovering in the low 70s during the day and low 40s at night, which held throughout the fest. Gone, but not forgotten, were the torrential rains of Tortugas III, and the difference meant a lot of grateful, fully engaged folks who switched colorful outfits more often than a Cher concert. And it wasn’t just youngsters suiting up. Tortugas is a truly multi-generational gathering, where Steve Adams – always a sartorial treat at festivals – rolled alongside his painted up parents, who had as much fun as anyone here. There’s something, dare I say, a bit more civilized about Tortugas than most festivals. While not everyone had a cabin, the front porches and indoor plumbing were shared pretty freely and provided an extended, relaxed party atmosphere that wasn’t completely focused on the central area or what was happening onstage. One felt safe and able to freak as much or as little as their heart desired. Some of my favorite moments occurred while watching the parade of laughing, giddy people flow past my cabin.

Zach Gill :: 3:30-4:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A solo set in name but Gill invited a few friends from New Monsoon and ALO to join him in one of the most disarming, honestly sweet sets this year. Looking like a comedia clown without the long-nosed facemask, Gill opened with a short, centering ohm chant, and then announced, “This song is about breaking through the ice.” The covers this round included Billy Joel‘s “Vienna” (done straight and true for all the crazy children that needed to slow down for a bit) and Huey Lewis & The News‘ “The Heart of Rock & Roll,” which Gill explained afterwards, “Huey Lewis was the first concert I chose to go to, begged my parents to buy tickets to. Then I saw Kenny Rogers. He wore a silver jumpsuit and threw out Frisbees. And how I tried to catch those Frisbees.” That Gill sounded genuinely wistful describing what seems like a cornball moment strikes to the center of his music. His cover choices and originals that more than hold their own against established masters speak to his ambitions and loves, and whether behind a piano, squeezing an accordion, plucking a ukulele or just swaying to a melody, Gill exudes talent and goodness in a way one would be stupid and rough spirited to refuse.

New Monsoon :: 4:45-6:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Zach Gill :: Las Tortugas

In many respects, NM is the quintessential Tortugas band – stellar musicians and serious composers yet not a household name. This fest celebrates talent and drive, with a distinct slant towards working bands making music because something in them demands it AND won’t allow them to slack off in carving out their own identity, regardless of the easier, perhaps more quickly profitable paths open to them. NM exhibited a melodic flow that slipped between genres/styles in a way that bolsters the idea that there is simply music and all of it – past, present and future – longs to converse in a living conversation. Standouts this time included an expansive “On The Sun” and a gliding version of the Talking Heads’ “Slippery People” that seemed lubricated with K-Y it was so smooth.

Poor Man’s Whiskey :: 6:15-7:15 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Dressed as Spinal Tap, the boys rollicked through “Big Bottom,” “Sex Farm Woman” and more, down to a tiny foam Stonehenge that was discarded for a bottle of whiskey. Control and abandon did a square dance onstage, making one feel like they’d wandered into a carnival ride of some sort. They wrapped the exuberant set by unplugging and playing Dr. Hook and the Medicine Show’s stardom loving “Cover of the Rolling Stone,” with the audience hooting the chorus with infectious glee. This band just knows how to put on a show that leaves one wanting very little in its wake.

Dun Four :: 6:15-7:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Big Light and Nathan Moore teamed up for their folk-rock Voltran configuration, the Dun Four. With Moore’s voice on the mend, they still played in a way that made one lean in. One is keenly aware that they are part of what’s unfolding when this group plays, and with ringmaster Moore urging us through hoops and tickling us with feats of magic (the man made his own head disappear!) one wants to join in. The carefree character of Tortugas was well represented as they juggled their songs and played musical catch with wide grins and easy flowing laughter. This is a real peanut butter & jelly combination that’s only likely to get tastier with future outings.

The Mother Hips :: 7:15-8:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

The Mother Hips :: Las Tortugas

Blasting out like caged rock beasts, the Hips went right from zero-to-sixty with “Time-Sick Son of a Grizzly Bear” and “Third Floor Story.” Working in their comfort zone, they quickly assimilated into full festival mode and it seemed as if they’d already been playing in their minds and the audience had to just catch up. Anchored to the slinky, complex bass of Paul Hoaglin (dressed in Steve Adams’ Thursday furry suit and looking like the rockingest Ewok ever) and the relentless drumming of John Hofer (sporting black rim glasses with a penis nose), singer-guitarists Tim Bluhm and Greg Loiacono raged mightily, particularly on new ones “White Falcon Fuzz” and the rangy “Pacific Dust,” the title track from their new album released last week, which takes their early wild jam sensibilities and marries them to something more structured and ultimately more satisfying. Whatever they touched, it seemed their group throttle was wide open, which left many of us dazed and happily confused as they plowed into the giant size finish of “Can’t Sleep At All,” with the guitars racing all the way up to Heaven. My lord, what a tremendous rock ‘n’ roll band.

Dumpstaphunk :: 9:30-11:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A touch smoother and more relaxed than the nicely battering energy of Thursday night, Dumpstaphunk again got us to toss our woes in the dumpster, and showed they really know how to work Stones material when they put “Miss You” on low simmer and cooked it to perfection. Highlight of this set was a spirited sit-in by Bill Kreutzmann. It was hard to tell who was smiling the most – drummer Raymond Weber, Ivan Neville or Kreutzmann – but their musical chemistry put some serious fizz into the whole evening.

“They’re pretty cool, huh? Me and Raymond got along great and played good together,” says Kreutzmann. “Playing with Dumpstaphunk is quite challenging. You gotta be a pretty heavy hitter to hang out with those boys.”

Blue Turtle Seduction :: 11:00-12:30 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Jake Cinninger – UM :: Tugas

Wrongly viewed by many as just another jam band, Blue Turtle have far more in common with The Pogues, The Clash, and other rowdy, intense uniters of the people. This set overflowed with bonhomie, wickedly played instruments, nicely barking vocals, and a feeling of vibrant engagement with music (and perhaps life as a whole) that made the throng inside Tuolumne literally bounce and leap with uncontrolled pleasure.

Umphrey’s McGee :: 12:30-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Not overly familiar with Umph’s oeuvre, I tend to take them in experientially, as if battered and tossed about by a powerful storm system. Their technical acumen is jaw-dropping, or put more colloquially by Blue Turtle’s Jay Seals as we stood stunned side stage, “These guys are a total Shredzillas.” True dat, and you could hear all the rehearsals and hours of solo practice that precede their performance, yet they managed to shake off the academic tang that can accompany such high end musicianship to create something that throbbed and breathed heavily in the moment. You can’t rightfully call what they do prog rock or jam music, yet those are in there. But so are the more violent, stimulating parts of modern classical music, jazz-fusion, deep reggae, goofy mainstream pop, and whatever else floats into their purview. With one solid block of time to work with in their Tortugas debut, Umphrey’s – bathed in the most exciting light show all weekend – ranged through familiar material (opener “Pay The Snucka” flipped our collective switch FAST and last tune “Partyin’ Peeps” sent us into the night festive as fuck) and an excellent cover of The Police‘s “When The World Is Running Down…,” but it was the tidal rise and fall of the intercut “Utopian Fir” that most revealed what a powerhouse act they are today. As Tortugas continues to raise its bar on headliner talent, Umphrey’s McGee were a great fit that left the majority hungry for their Halloween night sets.

Umphrey’s McGee setlist
Pay the Snucka, Andy’s Last Beer > The Bottom Half, White Man’s Moccasins, The Triple Wide* > Syncopated Strangers, When the World Is Running Down You Make the Best of What’s Still Around, Utopian Fir > Glory^ > Utopian Fir > Masoka Tanga > Utopian Fir, Plunger
Encore: Women Wine and Song, Partyin’ Peeps


Notes:
* with Rhiannon teases

^ with Ivan Neville on keys

Continue reading for Saturday at Las Tortugas…

Saturday, 10.31

Big Light :: 3:00-4:15 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Big Light :: Las Tortugas

What finer, more succinct compliment can one give a band than to say that they’re a bit better every single time you see them? Big Light is surely that, and within a few short years they’ve developed into one of the most consistently enjoyable modern rock acts going. Their jam roots are pretty much behind them, especially with lead guitarist Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas endlessly needling them forward into tougher, gnarlier terrain. A well-sauced bohemian youth asked me, “What is this? I like it but couldn’t say what it is.” I told her, “It’s rock that pops, pop that rocks, and rarely does it settle for doing things as they have in the past.” There’s a restless jitter to Big Light that recalls the basement jams of the Velvet Underground, except they play songs with considerably more heart and compassion than Reed, Cale, etc. Umph’s Joel Cummins manned the keys for most of the set, and his piano rolls and sumptuous fills beefed up the Light’s sound and revealed a simpatico comrade in Cummins, who is, in my opinion, the secret weapon in Umphrey’s McGee, where he slips between the many notes of the guitarists to provide gorgeous texture and a unifying glue that’s essential to their overall mojo.

Counter Clarkwise :: 4:15-5:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

So loose and fearlessly silly, this side project of Tea Leaf Green‘s Josh Clark reminded me a huge amount of The Modern Lovers if they played their instruments better. Ditties for a smiling tomorrow offered with crooked grins. I’ll take it!

Hot Buttered Rum :: 5:15-6:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Hot Buttered Rum :: Las Tortugas

Dressed as wild rag dolls, HBR presented a particularly fluid mixture of musics past and present, hot jazz snuggling with exploratory, highly modern acoustic music, hay wagon hick shaking hands with bubblegum pop. And underneath it all rode Matt Butler (Everyone Orchestra), the invisible drummer so marbled into the musculature of this music that you don’t often notice there’s a drummer at all. All of them are finding more and more ways to serve the songs and cut back on spotlight soloing, which just makes their open-armed sprint towards WHATEVER music turns them on work better and better.

Nicki Bluhm & The Gramblers :: 5:15-6:15 p.m. :: The Tavern

Dressed as a prima bonita senorita, Nicki belted ‘em out with the power and naked appeal of obvious touchstones Bonnie Raitt and Linda Ronstadt, looking especially happy next to her Sergio Leone cowboy husband, Tim Bluhm. There’s so much blues power soul to the Gramblers, and words simply sound better falling from Nicki’s tongue. Good songs and good players, they kick up real dust on their lonesome roads and homeward bound journeys. Love seems always on the edges of what they do, and in this way it always feels warm and familiar even if you’re hearing the tunes for the first time. Throw in the slow hand glide of guitarist Deren Ney and the whole shebang rocks.

Pimps of Joytime :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall
New Fangled Wasteland :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: The Tavern

As the sun fully set, we had our choice of two varieties of funky soulfulness, either the polished, unbelievably tight, endlessly rolling grooves of the Pimps or the Beck-inspired swing of New Fangled Wasteland, which includes TLG’s Trevor Garrod, ALO’s Dave Brogan and Steve Adams, and holy-jeez-this-guy-is-amazing guitarist Chris Haugen. You couldn’t lose no matter which path you chose, and not a few of us kept sprinting back and forth between the two, finding that the proverbial “good foot” lay on our left and our right. Both bands offered up something fresh in a field that’s frequently tired as can be.

The Mother Hips :: 8:45-10:00 p.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Umphrey’s McGee :: Las Tugas

Easily one of the hardest, heaviest Hips sets ever, and this coming from someone whose total exposure is swiftly moving towards triple digit attendance. In a smaller room and Halloween infusing a pervasive mischievousness in most folks, the Hips absorbed that vibe and issued forth a dirty sweet exhibition that had guitars rattling, drums nailing us in the gut and the bass taking the feet out from under us. I said it aloud a few times during this set, but it bears repeating here: The Mother Hips are a perfect classic four-man rock outfit. The material is as good as it gets and they play with a rich skill that doesn’t refuse the immediate inspiration of the moment. I and others screamed ourselves hoarse throwing in on gems like “Rich Little Girl,” and if you weren’t already in love with them it was almost a sure bet you were by the end of this barnstormer.

Umphrey’s McGee :: 10:00-11:15 p.m. & 12:15-1:45 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Umph’s split two-set Halloween show was more focused and overtly clever than Friday night, with a plethora of smarty-pants mash ups, both in the music (see setlist below) and their costumes, continuing a tradition started last year on Halloween. However, it was the second set that really put the hammer down, the sort of performance that doesn’t wait for you to join in but instead just grabs you by the collar and screams, “You’re coming along NOW, motherfuckers!” So intense, so heavy that I can only say I felt vaguely violated in a fine way. And Kreutzmann jumped up to get a piece of it, and though a somewhat odd pairing it seemed all were having fun jostling about together. Umphrey’s are the sort of technical wizards that Guitar Player Magazine readers adore, but their willingness to hang their asses out, both for a laugh and the thrill of it, makes for music that totters on the edge of collapse almost constantly but rarely if ever really crumbles. Cool.

“The more work that people put into their music the easier they are to play with,” says Kreutzmann on playing with Umphrey’s. “Years ago I was playing in a jam session at this guy’s barn in Kauai and I kept listening for songs or melodies until finally I said, ‘Do any of you guys know ANY songs?’ and not one of them did. So, the opposite is quite preferred.”

Umphrey’s McGee Set I: JaJunk% > 2×2& > Q*Bert& > 2×2, Cemetery Walk, Padgett’s Profile, All In Time%%, Cemetery Walk II, Sweet Sunglasses*
Set II: Jazz Odyssey > Nothing Too Fancy > Hangover > Night Gambler** > Nothing Too Fancy, FF > Professor Wormbog^, JaJunk, Mulche’s Odyssey, Land of Wappy$
Encore: 40′s Theme, Nemo’s Fat Bottomed Good Times$$


Notes:
% with Smooth Criminal > Heartbreaker jam
& with Late In the Evening jams
%% with Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’ jam
* mash up of: Sweet Dreams (Eurythmics) + Sunglasses at Night (Corey Hart) + Electric Feel (MGMT)
** mash up of: The Gambler (Kenny Rogers) + Night Fever (The Bee Gees) + Rapper’s Delight (The Sugarhill Gang) + Bring the Noise (Public Enemy; with Andy on vocals)
^ with Bill Kreutzmann on drums
$ mash up of: Wappy Sprayberry + Land of Confusion (Genesis) + Seek & Destroy (Metallica)
$$ mash up of: Nemo + Fat Bottomed Girls (Queen) + Good Times Bad Times (Led Zeppelin)

Sean Leahy :: 11:15-12:15 a.m. :: The Tavern

Papa Mali :: Las Tortugas

What a goddamn tone master is Sean Leahy! His guitar work throbs with the massive fullness of blues greats like Freddie and Albert King, where things build and build and are then sliced ‘n’ diced with sharp slashes and wicked, finger-cramping runs. Playing in a neat trio setting with a crisp, intuitive drummer and bassist Mark Calderon, one of the hardest working men at Tortugas, performing with even more bands than Steve Adams (which is saying something), Leahy was a fount of good rockin’ after midnight (even before the clock chimed 12) and secured a spot on my list of “Under-sung Musicians” that I will continue to champion. The dude was every bit the player of anyone who picked at six-strings all weekend, satisfying in a really visceral way. And his songs are damn catchy and he sings well, too. So there!

Papa Mali featuring Bill Kreutzmann :: 3:30-7:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

With a delayed start, a decent amount of the crowd had dissipated by the time Papa and company took the stage. Bone weary and tired of my costume, I made it through the first wave of thick, off-footedly funky swamp music, and it was only sheer fatigue that made me leave. With eyes rimmed by cool makeup, Kreutzmann swings in a different way with Papa’s music, and even the Dead covers sprinkled throughout their set have an organic newness to them despite their familiarity. They began playing as if the music had been hanging in the air waiting for them to deliver it. No warm up, no ascent, we were just suddenly sky high and flying fast. By all reports these blues-rock-jazz-Dixieland explorers stayed near this altitude until the sun was firmly in the sky, digging into songs only Papa Mail knew by Van Morrison and others, with the ensemble thrusting ahead with a shared confidence that they could pull off whatever they tried.

“This all came about because Aimee [Kreutzmann's significant other] introduced me to Malcolm’s [Papa Mali] music. I’m from New Orleans, and she knows I love the music. My mother was born there. And then lo and behold – it’s now two or three years ago – we were playing the Oregon Country Fair and he was one of the headliners on the main stage. I heard him and went, ‘Uh huh,’ and went up and introduced myself and we didn’t part until the end of the Fair. We were connected at the hip. We actually closed that weekend playing from 1-4 in the morning, though we outdid that at Las Tortugas ’cause I hear we didn’t finish till 7:30 in the morning,” chuckles Kreutzmann, who with Papa Mali showed more raw stamina than even most of the hardened festival vets this year. “Music does that to you. It kinda gives this energy to keep on playing, keep on going, especially when it’s not a job and you’ve been in the band for 40 years and you’ve done it over and over and you’re still playing the same old songs. Then you don’t get the energy from it.”

Continue reading for Sunday at Las Tortugas…

Sunday, 11.01

The slow exodus began this morning, and while there was considerably less flailing and exotic dancing on Sunday, there was one of this year’s overall strongest days of music, with a distinctly Dead-y undercurrent unifying things. Where the final day at many small festivals feels like a cobbled together afterthought, Tortugas consistently delivers MANY great reasons to stick around for the full load.

Trevor Garrod :: 12:00-1:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

In what’s become a Tortugas tradition, the Tea Leaf singer-keyboardist kicked off the main stage’s final furlong with heartbreaking originals and an unerring instinct for deep covers that suit him to a tee. A tender, exposed artist in this setting, his willingness to parade emotionally naked before us generated more than a few tears amongst the lounging, largely shagged out troopers sticking around for Day Four. If Tom Waits sang ‘em sweet instead of sour it might come out sounding a bit like Trevor solo.

Tracorum :: 1:00-2:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

A somewhat classic jam band, Tracorum wandered through styles looking for what truffles they could find. While rangy as hell, they artfully explored whatever avenues turned them on, and acquitted themselves well in the blues, reggae and traditional rock areas. Gospel touches kept cropping up, and they delivered a particularly melancholy reading of Dylan’s “You Ain’t Going Nowhere.” Against all belief, Kreutzmann hopped onstage and knocked it out of the park during his sit-in. If he slept after his arrival on Friday afternoon then few of us knew when.

Guitarmageddon :: 3:00-4:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Full-on groin thunder ‘n’ lightning is what the Josh Clark/Sean Leahy led Guitarmageddon delivered with one of the best surprises all weekend, a set of nearly all AC/DC covers (capped by a blistering assault on Iron Maiden’s “Aces High”). Opener “Sin City” seethed like The Stooges of “Down In The Street,” and like most of their takes on AC/DC’s tunes, they put subtle spin on fairly straight renditions, making things just different enough to tickle your ear but sacrificing none of the lusty, nasty pleasure of the originals. “Dirty Deeds,” “Jailbreak,” slow blues deep cut “Ride On” and “Whole Lotta Rosie” (both with make-ya-scream shredding from Big Light’s Korpas), and a ballsy “Highway To Hell” amped up our flagging Sunday energies and made a number of us act the fool at the lip of the stage as we punched key lines and threw the horns with real abandon. Little touches like Clark’s Survivor (the band not the TV show) t-shirt and Leahy’s Thrasher Magazine shirt planted their tongues firmly in their cheeks, but the music was all muscle backed by one of the most powerful rhythm sections all weekend. At one point between songs, Leahy further added to their classic rock cred, saying, “I walked into a wall and gave myself a black eye last night. Good times.” I was glad to offer up the bottle of Jack Daniels in my cabin for their onstage lubrication.

Dave Brogan Band :: 4:00-5:00 p.m. :: The Tavern

Front Street featuring Stu Allen :: Las Tortugas

Hands down, one of the most baldly, immediately enjoyable sets at Tortugas IV. With TLG’s Scott Rager laying down a clean, sharp drum line, Garrin Benfield ripping up lead guitar (including some mouth watering slide runs that compared favorably to Derek Trucks… really), and Brogan (ALO) out from behind the kit with an acoustic guitar, the whole combination just worked. Brogan’s got a classic pop voice and killer falsetto, and he used it on his very winning originals and a splendid, appropriately sleepy cover of the Stones‘ “Waiting On A Friend” that hit the spot on our final afternoon. This was the dance party that filled our limbs and heads with enough new fuel to push on through to Tea Leaf’s late night finish.

Front Street featuring Stu Allen :: 5:00-6:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Comprised almost entirely of well-chosen Grateful Dead tunes, the JGB guitarist-vocalist shined away from Melvin Seals, running his handpicked band through their paces and radiating a sort of liquid sunshine to a crowd that drank in every ray they beamed out. This was the “comfort set” of the weekend, and it continued Tortugas tradition of honoring Jerry, Bobby, et al. and their cornerstone position in this scene. “Truckin’” was pure pleasure and came across with the same bravado it had when first recorded. “New Speedway Boogie” followed, bolstered by yet another sit-in from Kreutzmann, who flowed with easy confidence, each stick strike exactly where it should be, the man flowing with the music and in turn bringing everyone else’s game up. Superb takes on “St. Stephen” and angry Bob classic “Throwing Stones” took this one over the top and made the old slightly new again.

Kreutzmann with Dumpstaphunk

“I like doing a few Dead tunes, especially in BK3 because we do them so outrageously different, but I don’t like doing a whole night of them,” says Kreutzmann. “My favorite stuff that’s coming up is with Malcolm and it’s called Seven Walkers, and it’s all brand new [Robert] Hunter songs. We have all the basics recorded except for one. We’re just putting on the final touches. It’ll be called Seven Walkers and that’s also the name of the band. We’ll still play as Papa Mali but we’ll have this other band that plays Hunter songs. These songs are terrific. I read ‘em and they brought tears to my eyes they’re so terrific.”

“I guess I hogged the stage a little bit [laughs]. I love playing with other musicians. I play all kinds of music; it just depends on the musicians I’m playing with” continues Kreutzmann. Over here [in Hawaii, where he lives] I play with a lot of jazz musicians. I loved playing with all the bands [at Tortugas], even not knowing their material unless they were cover bands, and that was even fun playing in the Grateful Dead cover band [i.e. Front Street].”

Tistrya And Friends :: 6:30-7:30 p.m. :: The Tavern

Beginning with an a cappella version of traditional “I’ll Fly Away,” Tistrya proved a folksy songbird of great, simple potency, inviting pals from many bands to sing and sway with her, delving into heart warming original material and inviting covers. This was music to gather around and absorb with a smile. Real nice stuff.

Hot Buttered Rum :: 7:30-9:00 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Papa Mali & Friends featuring Kreutzmann

“Bye, bye grey skies/ Everybody’s ready for the blue.” HBR sang what many of us were thinking and delivered another top notch commingling of elements that on paper don’t gel but in their hands move together with the solidity and swiftness of mercury. They exploded their thing to include a nifty mid-set Everyone Orchestra interlude with Matt Butler as the hopping conductor out front. And few in attendance will forget the gaggle of Dolly Parton costumed gals who joined them during a cover of “9 to 5.” A very Talking Heads style take on “Take Me To The River” furthered the sense one was at a slightly naughty revival meeting.

Papa Mali featuring Bill Kreutzmann :: 10:00-11:30 p.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

When Reed Mathis finally arrived from the Bay Area, Papa’s quartet that’s been recording in Austin blindsided us with one of the strongest, most gripping 90-minutes this year. Backed by perhaps the most conversational drummer of all time – yes, Kreutzmann keeps marvelous time but his sure cymbal strikes and dancing tom strokes are in constant chatter with his bandmates – they developed a kind of voodoo swing, going deep into freaked out caverns and outwards onto riverboats full of jazz bounce. Garcia faves “Deal” and “Goin’ Down The Road Feelin’ Bad” were offered up with serious gusto, and the music danced with us and the musicians making it. New Hunter composition “New Orleans Crawl,” about the heel dragging post-Katrina though decidedly more joyous than that sounds, was marvelous and makes one hungry to hear the whole lot of new Hunter tunes performed by this group. Overflowing with bounteous soul and blues dirtiness, Papa Mali and his band knocked it out the park late in the game.

Montana Slim :: 11:30-12:30 a.m. :: Tuolumne Hall

Like a modern day descendent of Dan Hicks and His Hot Licks or a contemporary aware cousin to the Cheap Suit Serenaders, Montana Slim are a primo string band that roams around way beyond the hills of bluegrass and folk low lands. There’s flashes of humor, which is always appealing, but they play with seriousness and a real engaging sort of back-and-forth between players. They were a lovely way to simmer down after Papa Mali rolled over us, and set up the remaining festivarians nicely for the finale.

Tea Leaf Green :: 12:30-2:30 a.m. :: Terrapin Big Top Stage

Tea Leaf Green :: Las Tortugas

Beginning with Bowie‘s “Moonage Daydream” (likely in honor of the nearly full moon beaming down on us) and finishing the main set with Ziggy’s “Starman,” TLG proved the ideal closer for this festival. They are tight as hell right now, dovetailing beautifully together, and working up fine new material that speaks to a promising future for this lineup. Older faves like “Ride Together” had swaying hips in this set, and they attacked every cut like a headliner, pushing and slicing in ways that kept even the wobbliest of us on our feet.

Tea Leaf is always buoyant, bubbly even, but this night they were like a fizzy lifting drink, and I let myself float away from the crowd so I could wander the moon-lit grounds one last time before the alarm clock, duty filled world of home beckoned once again come sunrise. And in this stroll I felt something break loose inside me, in a good way.

For all the darkness and negativity of this world – the myriad things that have me empathizing with the Devil – I realized that human beings are also capable of something outrageously lovely like this festival. It’s not practical or reasonable for such a thing to last more than a few days, but it’s encouraging in a fundamental way that the collective efforts of many people could create this temporary paradise. Music is the unifying element, but it’s so much more – days of extreme fullness and peace filled with stories and laughter and kisses and gentler things. Leaving Tortugas behind is always a bittersweet sting but that it happens at all, that four days can be made into this delightful thing, is reason enough to not give the Devil his due and strive to bring some of this magic home with us to share with others.

Continue reading for more images of Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead IV…

Bill Kreutzmann

Tea Leaf Green

Dumpstaphunk

Bill Kreutzmann with Umphrey’s McGee

Kris Myers – Umphrey’s McGee

Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Joel Cummins – Umphrey’s McGee

Ryan Stasik – Umphrey’s McGee

Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Jake Cinninger – Umphrey’s McGee

Vince Iwinski (manager) & Joel Cummins – Umphrey’s McGee

Kris Myers & Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Bradly Bifulco – Big Light

Steve Adams – Big Light

Steve Adams & Nathan Moore – The Dun Four

Paul Hoaglin & Tim Bluhm – The Mother Hips

Dennis Cook – Your Fearless Scribe

Blue Turtle Seduction

Matt Butler – Hot Buttered Rum

Matt Butler

Jeff Miller – New Monsoon

Trevor Garrod – Tea Leaf Green

Reed Mathis

Poor Man’s Whiskey

Bill Kreutzmann & Raymond Weber – Dumpstaphunk

Dumpstaphunk

Ian Neville – Dumpstaphunk

Zach Gill

JamBase | A Happy Place
Go See Live Music!


Tea Leaf Green: One New Day Tour

Tea Leaf Green: One New Day Tour

Tea Leaf Green

Tea Leaf Green has announced their upcoming One New Day Tour. After taking some down time the last few months, the band is ready to get back on the road. The upcoming tour kicks off January 13, 2010 in Breckenridge, CO and will take TLG across the country with stops in Denver, Minneapolis, St. Louis, and Boston. Prior to the big 2010 tour, the band will perform two nights in Santa Cruz, CA on November 20 and 21, one show in Sebastopol, CA on December 20, and they will ring in NYE in Phoenix, AZ.

Tea Leaf Green Tour Dates

11/20/09 Fri Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz, CA

11/21/09 Sat Moe’s Alley Santa Cruz, CA

12/20/09 Sun Hopmonk Tavern Sebastopol, CA

12/31/09 Thu The Compound Phoenix, AZ

01/13/10 Wed three20south Breckenridge, CO

01/14/10 Thu Fox Theatre Boulder, CO

01/15/10 Fri Bluebird Theater Denver, CO

01/16/10 Sat Belly Up Aspen, CO

01/17/10 Sun Aggie Theatre Fort Collins, CO

01/20/10 Wed Bottleneck Lawrence, KS

01/21/10 Thu Cabooze Minneapolis, MN

01/22/10 Fri High Noon Saloon Madison, WI

01/23/10 Sat Lincoln Hall Chicago, IL

01/26/10 Tue Bluebird Bloomington, IN

01/27/10 Wed Blueberry Hill (The Duck Room) St. Louis, MO

01/28/10 Thu 20th Century Theatre Cincinnati, OH

01/29/10 Fri Mountainlair Ballroom Morgantown, WV

01/30/10 Sat 9:30 Club Washington, DC

02/02/10 Tue Jefferson Theater Charlottesville, VA

02/03/10 Wed Chameleon Club Lancaster, PA

02/06/10 Sat Paradise Rock Club Boston, MA

02/13/10 Sat Crystal Bay Club Casino Crystal Bay, NV

02/14/10 Sun Crystal Bay Club Casino Crystal Bay, NV


Tea Leaf Green: NYE in Zona

Tea Leaf Green New Year’s Eve Show Announced

Tea Leaf Green

Tea Leaf Green has announced that they will be celebrating New Year’s Eve at The Compound in Phoenix, AZ. Join the band as they celebrate the arrival of 2010 at this brand new venue and ring in the New Year in style! Presale tickets are available now.

Tea Leaf Green play this Halloween weekend at the Las Tortugas Music Festival in Groveland, CA near Yosemite.

Tea Leaf Green tour dates available here.


Las Tortugas IV: Full Schedule, Daily Themes and Single Day Tix

VOODOO, BOOGIE AND ENCHANTMENT UNDER THE SEA!

Umph :: 10.31.08 :: by Dave Vann

With Halloween fast approaching, it’s time to start sewing costumes, carving jack-o’-lanterns and begin thinking about the lovely mischief we’ll get into on All Hallow’s Eve. How about a diverse, cozy music festival with Umphrey’s McGee, Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk, the Grateful Dead’s Bill Kreutzmann and the cream of Northern California’s rock scene, all set amongst Yosemite’s redwoods at a well appointed lodge? Las Tortugas IV – Dance of the Dead takes place Thursday, October 29 – Sunday, November 1 at Evergreen Lodge.

The festival has just announced their full schedule to help with your holiday weekend planning. Single day tickets are also now on sale. A customizable day-by-day grid can be found here. Even if you can’t make all four days, there’s exciting, diverse options available each day like Umphrey’s on Friday & Saturday, Papa Mali with Kreutzmann on Saturday & Sunday, Tea Leaf Green on Sunday and Dumpstaphunk on Thursday & Friday, along with a packed lineup of top flight musicians including BAG of Trix (Gill, Adams & Brogan of ALO), The Mother Hips, Hot Buttered Rum, New Monsoon, Nathan Moore, Front Street featuring Stu Allen (JGB) and much more. Single day tickets can be purchased here.

Las Tortugas has also revealed this year’s daily themes, which always bring out a peacock array of fantastic sights at this strongly communal affair, where folks decorate their cabins and share a fantastic distillation of the festival experience at its best. This year’s themes are:

Thursday: Voodoo Circus
Friday: Boogie Nights
Saturday: Halloween
Sunday’s Jubilee Theme: Enchantment Under the Sea Dance

Las Tortugas IV hopes you can join in this inspirational, uplifting gathering with one of the strongest festival lineups this fall in a beautiful, thoroughly unique setting.

-Full Las Tortugas IV schedule here.

-Four-day and single day tickets here.


Golden Gate Gramble II | 08.22 | S.F.

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Dave Vann

Golden Gate Gramble II :: 08.22.09 :: Mezzanine :: San Francisco, CA

The Gramble :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

When San Francisco experiences a rare day of high temperatures masses of people take to the parks and streets to escape buildings that are typically without air conditioning systems. Hipsters flock to Dolores Park, hippies to hippie hill, crack heads to The Tenderloin, and so on. On Friday August 28, the first day of Outside Lands (read the review here), the heat was stifling and caused many festival-goers to seek shade during the day while eagerly anticipating the cool night to come. When the music in the park ended, due to the strictly enforced 10 p.m. noise curfew, festival revelers with no intention of sleeping headed downtown to Mezzanine for the second annual Golden Gate Gramble. The lineup featured a who’s who of Bay Area jammers including ALO, Tea Leaf Green guitar player Josh Clark‘s side project Counter Clarkwise, the Beck cover band New Fangled Wasteland and a large amount of surprise guests. While there is no solid definition of the word “gramble,” one of the founders of the musical event, Greg Loiacono of The Mother Hips, has said a gramble is “an undefinable word and or action.” However ambiguous that definition may be, all who showed up for the second annual Gramble undoubtedly came away from the amazing show with their own unique understanding of what the word means.

Beck cover band New Fangled Wasteland played first, and is comprised of bassist Steve Adams (ALO, Big Light), drummer Dave Brogan (ALO), freelance guitar extraordinary Chris Haugen and Trevor Garrod (Tea Leaf Green) on keys. For a side project/cover band, New Fangled Wasteland is as tight and just as apt to carry on musical improvisation as any of the members’ respective main bands. The group typically started off a Beck song and drifted into an extended jam that saw all the musicians playing with such commitment and skill that it’s unfortunate the band only plays special engagements; a fact that makes their rare performances something to truly appreciate. Haugen’s guitar style really added to the overall musical palette, especially on “Earthquake Weather,” “Farewell Ride” and “Mixed Bizness.”

ALO :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

Up next was Counter Clarkwise, a band formed on a whim after Stephen Perkins of Jane’s Addiction suggested the name to Josh Clark while the two were touring together with Region of Darkness. With a constantly revolving cast of musicians that has included Steve Molitz (Particle), Steve Adams and Reed Mathis (TLG), Clarkwise is used as a vehicle for Clark stay busy when his time isn’t consumed with Tea Leaf. The musical endeavor also provides an avenue for Clark to do some musical lampooning. Coming from the “jam scene” and living in San Francisco, Clarkwise songs like “Condescending Hippy” and “Ninja Hipster” seem to act as an outlet for Clark and playing the songs to a hometown audience is a form of therapy. While at its core, Counter Clarkwise is a country rock group, there are occasional bouts of psychedelia and free form jam that really highlight the ensemble’s varied talents.

When ALO took the stage, vocalist and key master Zach Gill tried to offer his understanding of what a gramble is: “[It's] some sort of combination of grinning and rambling,” although noting that his definition is still open for interpretation. Gill was in no rush with ALO, telling the crowd that the music was going to go extremely late into the night. Due to the lack of consistent touring in the past two years, the group has spent less time together as the ALO collective in recent years, instead, opting to invest time into individual solo and side projects. ALO has apparently been working on new material, though, and played some of the new songs this night. At one point, keyboards were brought out for Adams and Lebo, typically the bass player and guitarist of the band, and an electronic drum pad was carted out for Brogan. With the electronic instruments in place, the band went into an interesting version of “Girl I Want To Lay You Down.” The song sounded like the end result of a lot of Kraftwerk listening, and acted as a live PA version of the ALO classic. A cover of Steely Dan‘s “The Fez,” off the studio kings’ 1976 gem The Royal Scam, was a surprise treat. Around 2 am, as the group left the stage, the crowd looked uncertain yet extremely hopeful for the annual gramble to come.

Adams, Garrod, Gill – Grambling :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

Opening up the gramble section were keyboardists Gill and Garrod, who shared keys and vocal duties on Kenny Rogers‘ time-honored classic “The Gambler,” a truly deserving song to start off the set. With a nonstop rotation of musicians coming and going during the gramble it was hard to keep track of who was playing. All the members of New Fangled Wasteland came out and played “Devil’s Haircut” and “Scarecrow,” once again highlighting the underrated guitar talent of Chris Haugen.

Next out was Big Light, a band that has received much attention in the Bay Area and beyond over the past year. Going through several lineup changes, Big Light has been scaled back to a tight-knit four piece, including Steve Adams on bass. Big Light’s guitarist Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas has really grown into his own as a lead six-string shredder. When Eric McFadden and New Monsoon‘s Jeff Miller came onstage and picked up guitars many musicians would have been intimidated, but Swordfish rose to the occasion and met his peers with fierce, confident playing.

Artist-at-large Charles Gonzalez came out at one point to lend vocals to The Modern Lovers’ “Pablo Picasso.” With a ragtag cast of performers onstage, Gonzalez seemed to perfectly capitalize off the anything-can-happen mentality of the gramble. Also noteworthy was a bluegrass themed cover of Radiohead‘s “Creep” some time before 4:00 am, when the night wound down after an exhausting display of grambling.

Continue reading for a few more pics of the Golden Gate Gramble II…

JamBase | Grambled

Go See Live Music!


Golden Gate Gramble II | 08.22 | S.F.

Words by: Justin Gillett | Images by: Dave Vann

Golden Gate Gramble II :: 08.22.09 :: Mezzanine :: San Francisco, CA

The Gramble :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

When San Francisco experiences a rare day of high temperatures masses of people take to the parks and streets to escape buildings that are typically without air conditioning systems. Hipsters flock to Dolores Park, hippies to hippie hill, crack heads to The Tenderloin, and so on. On Friday August 28, the first day of Outside Lands (read the review here), the heat was stifling and caused many festival-goers to seek shade during the day while eagerly anticipating the cool night to come. When the music in the park ended, due to the strictly enforced 10 p.m. noise curfew, festival revelers with no intention of sleeping headed downtown to Mezzanine for the second annual Golden Gate Gramble. The lineup featured a who’s who of Bay Area jammers including ALO, Tea Leaf Green guitar player Josh Clark‘s side project Counter Clarkwise, the Beck cover band New Fangled Wasteland and a large amount of surprise guests. While there is no solid definition of the word “gramble,” one of the founders of the musical event, Greg Loiacono of The Mother Hips, has said a gramble is “an undefinable word and or action.” However ambiguous that definition may be, all who showed up for the second annual Gramble undoubtedly came away from the amazing show with their own unique understanding of what the word means.

Beck cover band New Fangled Wasteland played first, and is comprised of bassist Steve Adams (ALO, Big Light), drummer Dave Brogan (ALO), freelance guitar extraordinary Chris Haugen and Trevor Garrod (Tea Leaf Green) on keys. For a side project/cover band, New Fangled Wasteland is as tight and just as apt to carry on musical improvisation as any of the members’ respective main bands. The group typically started off a Beck song and drifted into an extended jam that saw all the musicians playing with such commitment and skill that it’s unfortunate the band only plays special engagements; a fact that makes their rare performances something to truly appreciate. Haugen’s guitar style really added to the overall musical palette, especially on “Earthquake Weather,” “Farewell Ride” and “Mixed Bizness.”

ALO :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

Up next was Counter Clarkwise, a band formed on a whim after Stephen Perkins of Jane’s Addiction suggested the name to Josh Clark while the two were touring together with Region of Darkness. With a constantly revolving cast of musicians that has included Steve Molitz (Particle), Steve Adams and Reed Mathis (TLG), Clarkwise is used as a vehicle for Clark stay busy when his time isn’t consumed with Tea Leaf. The musical endeavor also provides an avenue for Clark to do some musical lampooning. Coming from the “jam scene” and living in San Francisco, Clarkwise songs like “Condescending Hippy” and “Ninja Hipster” seem to act as an outlet for Clark and playing the songs to a hometown audience is a form of therapy. While at its core, Counter Clarkwise is a country rock group, there are occasional bouts of psychedelia and free form jam that really highlight the ensemble’s varied talents.

When ALO took the stage, vocalist and key master Zach Gill tried to offer his understanding of what a gramble is: “[It's] some sort of combination of grinning and rambling,” although noting that his definition is still open for interpretation. Gill was in no rush with ALO, telling the crowd that the music was going to go extremely late into the night. Due to the lack of consistent touring in the past two years, the group has spent less time together as the ALO collective in recent years, instead, opting to invest time into individual solo and side projects. ALO has apparently been working on new material, though, and played some of the new songs this night. At one point, keyboards were brought out for Adams and Lebo, typically the bass player and guitarist of the band, and an electronic drum pad was carted out for Brogan. With the electronic instruments in place, the band went into an interesting version of “Girl I Want To Lay You Down.” The song sounded like the end result of a lot of Kraftwerk listening, and acted as a live PA version of the ALO classic. A cover of Steely Dan‘s “The Fez,” off the studio kings’ 1976 gem The Royal Scam, was a surprise treat. Around 2 am, as the group left the stage, the crowd looked uncertain yet extremely hopeful for the annual gramble to come.

Adams, Garrod, Gill – Grambling :: 08.22 :: San Francisco

Opening up the gramble section were keyboardists Gill and Garrod, who shared keys and vocal duties on Kenny Rogers‘ time-honored classic “The Gambler,” a truly deserving song to start off the set. With a nonstop rotation of musicians coming and going during the gramble it was hard to keep track of who was playing. All the members of New Fangled Wasteland came out and played “Devil’s Haircut” and “Scarecrow,” once again highlighting the underrated guitar talent of Chris Haugen.

Next out was Big Light, a band that has received much attention in the Bay Area and beyond over the past year. Going through several lineup changes, Big Light has been scaled back to a tight-knit four piece, including Steve Adams on bass. Big Light’s guitarist Jeremy “Swordfish” Korpas has really grown into his own as a lead six-string shredder. When Eric McFadden and New Monsoon‘s Jeff Miller came onstage and picked up guitars many musicians would have been intimidated, but Swordfish rose to the occasion and met his peers with fierce, confident playing.

Artist-at-large Charles Gonzalez came out at one point to lend vocals to The Modern Lovers’ “Pablo Picasso.” With a ragtag cast of performers onstage, Gonzalez seemed to perfectly capitalize off the anything-can-happen mentality of the gramble. Also noteworthy was a bluegrass themed cover of Radiohead‘s “Creep” some time before 4:00 am, when the night wound down after an exhausting display of grambling.

Continue reading for a few more pics of the Golden Gate Gramble II…

JamBase | Grambled

Go See Live Music!


Bill Kreutzmann Joins Tortugas

GRATEFUL DEAD PERCUSSION MARVEL
TO BE HONORED GUEST AT THIS YEAR’S LAS TORTUGAS HALLOWEEN WEEKEND GATHERING


Bill Kreutzmann

The 4th annual installment of Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead, taking place October 29 – November 1 in Yosemite, CA, is very proud to announce that the legendary drummer and co-founder of the Grateful Dead, Bill Kreutzmann, will be the Honored Guest for this year’s festival. After honoring the Dead’s legacy the past two years with sizzling performances from Melvin Seals & JGB, Las Tortugas is delighted to continue the festival’s warm embrace of the roots of the jam-centric scene at the heart of this intimate, exciting festival. Kreutzmann’s innovative approach to drumming combined with his deep understanding of the power of rock ‘n’ roll and improvisation will be on display as he guests with Papa Mali at Las Tortugas. Las Tortugas is delighted to have Bill on board this year and look forward to the many surprises he’ll unleash from his voluminous trick bag!

Las Tortugas IV takes place at Evergreen Lodge in Yosemite and will feature performances from Umphrey’s McGee, Dumpstaphunk, Tea Leaf Green, Hot Buttered Rum, Bag of Tricks (Brogan, Adams & Gill of ALO), The Mother Hips, Blue Turtle Seduction, New Monsoon, Nathan Moore, Poor Man’s Whiskey, Pimps of Joytime, Papa Mali, Izabella, Big Light and more. The complete festival schedule and daily themes will be announced soon to aid folks in their holiday weekend planning for this special annual event.

Tickets for Las Tortugas are on sale now at evergreenhalloween.inticketing.com.

For more on Las Tortugas, check our coverage of the 2008 event here.


Outside Lands Music Festival
Day 1 Photos & Top 3

Words by: Kayceman & Dennis Cook | Images by: Dave Vann

Outside Lands Music Festival :: Day 1 :: 08.28.09 :: Golden Gate Park :: San Francisco, CA

The second annual Outside Lands Music & Arts Festival brought unusually warm weather to San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park. Reveling under the clear hot sun without a fogbank to be seen, the crowds slowly trickled in swelling to an estimated 30,000-plus for Pearl Jam‘s two hour headlining show. From Autolux, Akron/Family and The Dodos early to Zap Mama, Built To Spill, Silversun Pickups and The National mid-day all the way to Tea Leaf Green, Tom Jones, Q-Tip and Thievery Corporation later, there was music of all variety and with such incredible weather and manageable crowds the vibe was overwhelming positive.

Kayceman’s Top 3 From Friday

1. Pearl Jam – Almost two hours of unrelenting rock from acoustic slow burns to mid-tempo tension to all-out ball-busters, Pearl Jam is still one of the best rock bands on the road. Featuring only two songs from the forthcoming new album Backspacer, both “Got Some” and “The Fixer” came off well, but it was classics like “Alive,” “Animal,” “Better Man,” “Evenflow” and particularly psychedelic versions of “Corduroy” and “Black” that made the show. Beginning at sunset and playing into a gorgeous, warm night, even Eddie Vedder‘s end-of-tour-beaten voice couldn’t slow the band as they closed a stellar performance with two Neil Young covers, “Throw Your Hatred Down” (off 1995′s Mirrorball which Young recorded with Pearl Jam) and “Keep On Rockin’ In The Free World.”

2. Built To Spill – Although it should have been louder, Built To Spill’s swarming guitar madness made up for any volume deficiencies. Playing a hit-heavy set that included “The Plan,” “You Were Right,” “Car,” “Unconventional Wisdom,” “Carry The Zero” as well as one new track, “Hindsight,” from their album due in October, the band moved from spacey free-rock jams to punked-up aggression to patient restraint. There’s a reason BTS received more shout-outs than any band all day with both Eddie Vedder giving respect and Silversun Pickups frontman Brian Aubert gushing, “Built To Spill is one of the greatest bands ever!”

3. Silversun Pickups – After this set, it should now be clear to all why this L.A. indie quartet is playing major time slots at festivals like Lollapalooza, Coachella and Outside Lands. They freakin’ rock! Any volume issues from Built To Spill’s set had clearly been regulated and SSPU was big – HUGE actually – and loud like it needs to be. Less Smashing Pumpkins than a year or two ago, this band has grown into their sound. Overdrive guitars, feedback storms and some of the best scream-vocals around made songs like “Swoon,” “There’s No Secrets This Year” and “Kissing Families” fierce and cathartic.


Special Reunion Slot: A Tribe Called Quest – At Q-Tip‘s funner-than-hell hip-hop set (which was sadly dedicated to DJ AM who passed away Friday night) featuring a live band, fans got something super-duper special when Q brought out Phife Dawg, his partner from Tribe, for “Award Tour.” Upon the song’s conclusion Q was visibly giddy, beaming as he remarked, “Don’t know if y’all will ever see that again.”

Dennis Cook’s Top 3 From Friday

1. Tom Jones – Oh my Lord, Tom was glorious! There’s something enduringly entertaining about old school showmen like Jones, who continues to sing like Zeus himself while exuding a manly aura that makes one want to paw him, regardless of one’s sexual orientation. Backed by a crazy tight, super talented band, including a swinging, forceful horn section and on-point back-up singers, Jones showed no signs of slowing down, ranging through his giant catalog and showing off the way-better-than-expected new tunes and setting off waves of pure joy with generation crossing hits like “She’s A Lady,” “It’s Not Unusual” and his saucy cover of Prince’s “Kiss.” It was pure Golden Gate Park magic to see grandmas cutting loose with tattooed love boys and hardened bikers, everyone belting out the words with massive grins.

2. The National – After close to a decade this Brooklyn band is proving one for the long run and a real cumulative powerhouse on a festival stage. Not a dud note in their hour set, which dropped one beautifully crafted, emotionally delivered number after another. The jangle is strong in this band but it’s often layered over music that vibes with the poppier end of Radiohead, though The National’s dark side tends to be more lyrical than sonic. “Fake Empire,” which was used extensively during Obama’s White House run, including accompanying the video that ran just prior to his election night speech, was enormously well received by the hyper blue state audience. At one point, Aaron Dessner said, “I just killed a bug on my nose,” and then dedicated the next song to the fallen insect. Class act in every way.

3. Midnite – While a good portion of the crowd seemed either bored or perplexed by the St. Croix-based reggae institution, they nonetheless delivered as deep and heady-spiritual a display as their genre offers. Built around sustained, insistent rhythms and inspired textural shifts, there’s not a lot of peaks and valleys, and Bob Marley’s influence is almost nil, which, shooting straight, is what much of the buttermilk colored audience seemed to be craving. Too bad, because Midnite played an elemental, intense set that exemplified why they’ve built a large and ever-increasing worldwide fanbase.

West Indian Girl – featuring Guest Vocalist Miranda Lee Richards

Akron/Family

The Dodos

Built To Spill

Vau de Vire & Madd Vibe Orchestra

Midnite

The National

Incubus

Tom Jones

Pearl Jam

Pearl Jam

Pearl Jam


Late Night at the Golden Gate Gramble at Mezzanine…

ALO

GramJam: Jeff Miller, Eric McFadden, Bradly Bifulco, Steve Adams

Check back for lots more from Outside Lands…

JamBase | In The Park

Go See Live Music!



10,000 Lakes | 07.22 – 07.25 | MN

Words by: Herschel Concepcion | Images by: Norman Sands

10,000 Lakes Music Festival :: 07.22.09 – 07.26.09 :: Soo Pass Ranch :: Detroit Lakes, MN

10KLF 2009

The 7th annual 10,000 Lakes Music Festival saw the return of Widespread Panic (who last played the fest in 2005) as well as newcomers Wilco and the Dave Matthews Band. The caliber of these world-class acts ensures 10KLF’s position as a major contender in the festival circuit. With an attendance of 18,000 devoted music fans, 10KLF 2009 proved to be just as big a party as it ever was.

Wednesday, 07.22

We arrived Wednesday morning somewhat exhausted from the marathon drive the night before but surprisingly refreshed. Whether it was from the bright shining sun of a new day or the collective energy from an excitable crowd eager to get in, I couldn’t tell. Maybe it was both. The line to get into the Lake Sallie campground stretched for about two miles, and within an hour we were inside.

I’ve always enjoyed the camping at 10KLF, which has plenty of trees for shade – one of the key elements when determining the quality of your festival experience. A good camping spot can make or break your weekend, and 10,000 Lakes has plenty of choice spots if you know where to look. “The Soo Pass Ranch is a privately owned piece of property,” says Dave Weissman, media coordinator for the fest. “It comprises over 600 acres of land – mostly wooded – but also fields, the concert bowl, and more.”

Originally used as the site for WE Fest, a country music festival that draws upwards of 60,000 attendees every year, the Soo Pass Ranch was eventually chosen to host the first 10,000 Lakes Music Festival in 2003. Headliners that year included Widespread Panic, The Allman Brothers Band, Gov’t Mule, Leftover Salmon, and OAR. A resounding success, that crucial first year would pave the way for the evolution of this popular Midwest festival.

10KLF 2009

The crowd this year was a good one, full of purely positive individuals who shared a mutual love for music. I didn’t meet a single asshole all weekend. Comprised of people from all over the country (and even some from other parts of the world), the bulk of this year’s attendees consisted of Midwesterners from Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, and of course, Minnesota. It seems that Detroit Lakes is happy to host the festival, as many of the locals look forward to 10KLF as a weekend vacation.

The festival staff I encountered over the weekend was all friendly and in good spirits. The vendors, a mix of both local and regional suppliers, offered the standard festival fare, which was pretty much everything from funnel cakes and hot beef sundaes to hammocks and $6 sunglasses. And for the lazy, tired or hopelessly intoxicated there were cab rides on decked out golf carts for three bucks per person.

But, the best part was the stages. Situated within proximity of one another in the concert bowl, 10KLF’s stage setup makes it easy for one to float around and catch music while minimizing travel time between stages.

As for the music itself, it was clear that much thought and effort was put into the scheduling this year. There were very few conflicts between the major artists’ set times. This is one of the most important aspects of a well-planned festival. So with my gear unpacked and my campsite in order, it was time to slam some drinks and head down to the concert bowl for 10KLF 2009.

Gomez kicked things off at the Main Stage at 6 p.m., and although it was still early in the festival and the crowd for the set was at far less than capacity, the five-piece British outfit nevertheless set the tone for the weekend with their heavy, psychedelia-tinged blues rock.

John Bell – WSP :: 10KLF 2009

Next up was Southern rockers Widespread Panic, playing the first of two shows for the weekend. To be honest, I found myself disappointed with Wednesday’s show. Although it had its moments – it’s Panic, I can’t really see them playing a completely rotten gig – the playing seemed uninspired and lacked passion. I saw the boys six times last year (twice in Chicago, Rothbury and all three nights in Milwaukee to close out their fall tour) and was blown away every time. So, it was disconcerting to see them play the way they did that first night, especially when you know what they’re capable of. It’s always great to hear a solid “Bear’s Gone Fishin’,” and the “Maggot Brain” > “Chainsaw City” encore was good, but overall it seemed the boys were just having an off-night.

After Panic I walked over to the Field Stage for the first time, where Colorado-based duo Pretty Lights was well on their way to getting the crowd heated up and ready for a weekend of partying and pure debauchery. The sun was down and the critters were out in full force. Glow sticks and flashy toys were everywhere as I moved through the throng of people – a giant, moving mass of bodies completely under the control of the heavy beats of electronic producer Derek Vincent Smith and drummer Cory Eberhard. Now I’m not normally the biggest fan of DJs, but this was something else, and thanks to those two for helping to get the party started.

10KLF 2009 by Reistroffer Designs

Over at the Barn Stage was another Colorado group that was bringing it just as hard. In their fourth year at 10KLF, Kinetix played to a packed house and one of the most responsive crowds all weekend. Although I had never seen them play before, I had heard a lot about Kinetix and was interested in checking them out. I’m glad I did, and I would like to see these guys at more festivals. Right from the start it became clear that Kinetix had put a lot of hard work into their set, and it paid off. I would later find out that they had spent a month preparing for the show. To me that is the pinnacle of live music – focus, dedication, effort and a true appreciation for one’s fans. The highlights of the show included “People Start Hoppin’,” a song that seems to capture the core essence and philosophy of the band’s musical approach, as well as a cover of Queen’s “Bohemian Rhapsody” that they more than did justice to. Their style is completely rockin’, with just a dash of pop so that it’s catchy without being cheesy; and their compositions are well crafted with proper build-up and execution, not just a bunch of noisy, repetitive jamming. And their instrumentation is top-notch and tight, with each member finding his niche and working with the rest of the group as a whole to create a very unique and powerful sound. I can’t recommend these guys enough.

Playing the late night show over at the Saloon was Carney, a Los Angeles four-piece that features Reeve Carney on lead vocals and guitar and his brother Zane on lead guitar. I was only able to catch the last couple of songs because although the band was slotted to play till 2 a.m. they were cut off at 1:40. I don’t know whether it was from technical problems or they were just shut down, but from the little bit I did see I was impressed. Reeve is a great singer. He was howling into the mic when I walked in, pouring sweat and putting everything he had into that voice of his, which is one of the best I’ve heard recently. Pure emotion. His brother Zane is no slouch either, and was shredding on the slide guitar on one knee when the sound cut out. I’m not sure what Carney’s style is as a whole (since I witnessed less than 10 minutes of their set), but based on what I did hear these guys are pure rock & roll.

Continue reading for Thursday’s coverage of 10KLF…

Thursday, 07.23

Tim Carbone – Railroad Earth :: 10KLF 2009

I started off Thursday at the Field Stage, where singer/songwriter Pete Francis (Dispatch) teamed up with jam rock outfit Barefoot Truth for a 2 p.m. set that combined material from both artists’ catalogues. Francis’ singing and songwriting prowess, backed by Barefoot Truth’s jammed out rock instrumentation, was a great start to day two of 10KLF ’09. Set to tour in the spring, this is one collaboration not to be missed.

After Pete Francis and Barefoot Truth it was time for Railroad Earth to take the stage. I love these guys. I have been blown away by Railroad Earth’s performances time and time again, and Thursday’s show was no exception. Starting out with “Old Dangerfield,” the band blasted through a set that featured a number of great tunes such as “Bird in a House” and “The Forecast,” a mystical, mostly instrumental piece that feels like a really good acid trip. And “Like a Buddha” is always a crowd pleaser and a good channel for positive energy. After “Long Way to Go,” the band finished off with a double encore of “Mighty River” and the bluegrass number “Little Rabbit.” All in all, a five-star show, almost epic.

The headliner Thursday night was Wilco. Friends have long been telling me to check these guys out but I just never had a chance to really listen to them until this set. Shame on me. I knew they were good, but I had no idea how good they really were. Plus, they’re from Chicago, so I should’ve been on top of this band from the beginning. Oh well, better late than never.

Jeff Tweedy – Wilco :: 10KLF 2009

First, and perhaps most important point: Jeff Tweedy is a musical genius. Right from the start I could tell that Wilco is a serious band that treats their music as art – their songwriting and melodies are genuine and full of emotion. This is the real deal. I get the impression that they’re a “love ‘em or hate ‘em” kind of band, but I honestly don’t see how anyone with a true appreciation for music could dismiss the talent here. Maybe you just have to see them live. From what I’ve listened to before, I thought they were more of a softer style of music, and that notion was laid to rest when I saw this rockin’ set.

After Wilco I headed back over to the Field Stage for a change of pace, where Atmosphere, like Pretty Lights the night before, had taken control of the crowd and had the whole place moving. The very distinct hip-hop of rapper/MC Slug and producer Ant was straight-up party music, and the people sucked it down. A funky R&B mix of creatively textured beats and solid hooks paired with lyrical genius, Atmosphere laid it down dirty and kept the party bumpin’.

Digging Atmosphere it was hard to leave, but over at the Saloon stage something was unfolding. I’d heard of My Dear Disco but knew absolutely nothing about them. From the name I figured it was some sort of indie rock band, but the “Disco” part of it is what intrigued me. The possibility of a dance party will always pique my curiosity, so I made my way over and I’m glad I did. My Dear Disco is an eclectic, ’80s style group from Ann Arbor, Michigan that fuses electro-pop, funk, rock and techno in a style that the group calls “DanceThink.” Though the Saloon was completely packed I managed to squeeze my way in and get a closer look at the band. They have an incredible stage presence, especially charismatic singer Michelle Chamuel, who seems to possess a certain amount of that elusive star quality. The audience, as a result, was completely floored by the band’s performance. And so was I.

Continue reading for Friday’s coverage of 10KLF…

Friday, 07.24

Steve Kimock :: 10KLF 2009

I checked out part of the early afternoon set by acoustic guitar maestro Tim Sparks (who is a spitting image of Lebowski‘s The Dude) before heading over to the Everyone Orchestra at the Field Stage. Matt Butler did a fantastic job of orchestrating the assembled group of musicians, which featured guitarist Steve Kimock and his son John on drums, Reed Mathis from Tea Leaf Green on bass, Dominic Lalli from Big Gigantic on saxophone, and Erin Zindle and Randall Moore from The Ragbirds on violin and percussion. The resulting set was funky, fun and fresh, and, as always, Butler made sure to get the crowd in on the action as well.

Legendary guitar virtuoso Steve Kimock and his band Steve Kimock Crazy Engine was one of the acts I had been looking forward to all weekend, and I was not disappointed. Kimock’s son is a pretty damn good drummer, and I didn’t even realize Melvin Seals was in the band! Seals, who used to play in the Jerry Garcia Band, is a beast on the keys. The set was mostly instrumental, but there were a few with vocals (a great rendition of “That’s What Love Will Make You Do” comes to mind). Kimock’s got a great tone, and the music ranged from funky to super jazzy, and at times had a mystical Eastern quality to it. This was definitely one of the best shows of the weekend.

Dave Simonett – Trampled By Turtles

Trampled By Turtles hit the Main Stage at 6 p.m. and held the crowd in rapt attention with their high-energy brand of bluegrass. Fast and aggressive, the five pickers from Duluth, Minnesota showcased their instrumental talents and got the audience loosened up and ready for another serving of Widespread Panic.

When Panic hit the stage for the second time this weekend all reservations I had were quickly put to rest. This time the boys brought the heat. Between the rich vocals of John Bell, the driving, thumping bass of Dave Schools and Jimmy Herring‘s precision shredding on guitar, Panic more than made up for their performance on Wednesday. “Angels On High” was a treat, as was the “Tear The Roof Off The Sucker (Give Up The Funk)” tease in “Little Kin,” and the double encore of “Airplane” > “Pilgrims” was a perfect way to close out the set. However, it was the “Chilly Water” > “Smokestack Lightning” > “Drums” > “Bust It Big” > “Chilly Water” sandwich that really had my jaw on the floor. Sorry I ever doubted you guys.

The 11:30 p.m. timeslot featured a triple whammy of WookieFoot, BoomBox and The Macpodz. I ventured first over to the Field Stage for WookieFoot, where I grooved to their unique brand of psychedelic reggae jam rock for before heading over to BoomBox at the Barn. BoomBox, which features producer/DJ Russ Randolph and guitarist/vocalist Zion Godchaux (son of Dead alumni Keith and Donna Godchaux), is the product of two individuals with very diverse musical backgrounds. Their style is an interesting mix of rock, funk, and jazz that combines Randolph’s DJ skills with Godchaux’s guitar and smooth vocals. The crowd’s response to the duo was overwhelmingly positive, which just goes to show that there will always be a market for truly creative material.

After a quick stop at the Saloon to catch the tail end of Ann Arbor, Michigan jazz-rock outfit The Macpodz it was time for some much needed rest before tackling the final day of 10KLF ’09.

Continue reading for Saturday’s coverage of 10KLF…

Saturday, 07.25

Josh Clark – TLG :: 10KLF 2009

Saturday started out overcast and gray, which had some festival-goers worried that rain was on the way. But, when the sun finally broke through the clouds during Tea Leaf Green‘s 2 p.m. set at the Field Stage cheers erupted all across the concert bowl, which only seemed to bolster Tea Leaf’s performance. Having missed their set the day before (they played at the same time as Kimock) I made it a point to catch their second show of the weekend and see what the Bay Area rockers would bring to the 10KLF table. Overall it was a very impressive performance. Combining the soulful singing of keyboardist Trevor Garrod, the virtuosic six-string ripping of Josh Clark, the smooth, funky bass of Reed Mathis, and the drumming of Scott Rager, TLG put on a very tight show for their fans as well as those, like myself, who just happened to be in the right place at the right time.

Umphrey’s McGee was the first band of the day to take the Main Stage, and rocked a set that I – someone who’s never really been a fan, though I’ve seen them eight or nine times – found to be a really tight performance from the Chicago-based group. As I was heading up to the Saloon I heard them do a great cover of The Rolling Stones’ “Can’t You Hear Me Knocking” that made me wish I would’ve stuck around.

After checking out the folksy Americana of Breckenridge, Colorado’s Paper Bird, I headed back down to the Main Stage for the Dave Matthews Band. I don’t listen much to Dave Matthews these days but man does he have a great backing band. Boyd Tinsley is a master violinist, and Tim Reynolds knows how to shred a guitar proper. Then there’s saxophonist Jeff Coffin, whose virtuosic abilities can also be heard in Bela Fleck and the Flecktones. Dave Matthews, always up to the task of playing a good show for his fans, incorporated a varied mix of material into his set, from “Jimi Thing” and “Why I Am” to “Spaceman” and “Cornbread,” and even covered the Talking Heads’ “Burning Down the House” and Dylan’s “All Along the Watchtower.” Great performance from a bunch of super-pros.

After checking out the Saloon for a glimpse of another Chicago band, The Hue, I made my way back to the Barn to check out the North Indiana All Stars. Featuring guitarist Jake Cinninger, keyboardist Joel Cummins and drummer Kris Myers (all from Umphrey’s), the North Indiana All Stars brought a new groove to the final night of the fest. With Myers and bassist Tony Franklin as the backbone, the stage was set for the jazzy, funky, smooth improvisational work of Cinninger, Cummins and trumpet player Willie Waldman (who also plays with Snoop Dogg).

Jake Cinninger – UM :: 10KLF 2009

Heading back down to the Field Stage I was able to catch the last half hour of Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings. The pairing of Miss Jones and the Dap-Kings was like mashed potatoes and gravy. Jones is pure soul, through and through, and when combined with the funky playing of the Dap-Kings, made for a very high-energy show that had the audience howling and dancing their asses off. Jones is a charismatic soul diva with a stage presence that rivals the greats. She cracked jokes and danced like a wild woman throughout her set, and couldn’t have possibly done any better as the final Field Stage performance of the weekend. The crowd loved her.

The final band of the festival, Pert’ Near Sandstone, played to a Saloon that was so packed they had to shut the doors to prevent anyone else from coming in. What a pleasant surprise these guys were. I’d never heard of them but this hard-driving string band from Minneapolis really made an impression on me. Their sound is gritty, raw and pure – as roots music should be. Although completely beat by this point, I found myself dancing with all the crazy late-nighters in the Saloon – and those stuck outside – until the end of their set at three in the morning.

Reflecting later back home on the rooftop of my South Side Chicago apartment, looking out into the darkness dotted with the glittering lights of the city skyline, I was filled with a sense of calm. Listening to the cars flying by down below, there were moments when the warm summer wind died down and I could hear, far off in the distance, the faint pounding of bongo drums and the roar of 18,000 free spirits, and I knew I was not alone.

10KLF 2009 by Reistroffer Designs

Continue reading for more pics of 10KLF 2009…

A few of the 10,000 Lakes

Colonel Kurtz’ happy cousin

Matt Butler – Everyone Orchestra

Trevor Garrod (TLG) with Everyone Orchestra

John Kimock with Everyone Orchestra

Erin Zindle (The Ragbirds) with Everyone Orchestra

Ed Anderson possessed by the music – Backyard Tire Fire

Dave Matthews

Dave Matthews

Dave Matthews

Dave Matthews Band

honeyhoney

Honey Dogs

Gomez

Garaj Mahal

Jimmy Herring – WSP

John Bell – WSP

Todd Nance – WSP

Dave Schools – WSP

Brendan Bayliss – Umphrey’s McGee

Joel Cummins – Umphrey’s McGee

Tea Leaf Green

Scott Rager – Tea Leaf Green

Reed Mathis – Tea Leaf Green

John Skehan – Railroad Earth

Melvin Seals (Crazy Engine)

The Ragbirds

Mason Jennings

North Indiana All Stars

Tim Sparks

Sharon Jones

JamBase | Well Watered
Go See Live Music!


Las Tortugas IV: Umph, DumpstaTea Leaf, Hips, Monsoon, Rum

A HOPPIN’ HALLOWEEN AMONGST TALL TREES

Josh Clark – Tea Leaf Green
Las Tortugas III by Josh Miller

“A shared community dedicated to good times accessed through sound waves, dance and a neighborly spiritÂ…Las Tortugas has all the makings of an annual event that folks will mark on the calendar in permanent ink.” – JamBase

The premiere intimate West Coast fall music festival, Las Tortugas – Dance of the Dead IV, returns October 29 through November 1. Presented by Terrafin Entertainment, this emerging Halloween weekend gathering at Evergreen Lodge in Groveland, CA (located at the Western Gate of Yosemite National Park) offers a musician and fan friendly experience in an idyllic woodland setting dotted by cozy cabins, a restaurant and bar, a general store and many unique features. Las Tortugas offers a handpicked, quality assortment of diverse, jam friendly artists in a positive, engaged environment that’s quickly becoming a can’t-miss event in Northern California.

This year’s lineup features:

Umphrey’s McGee
Ivan Neville’s Dumpstaphunk
Tea Leaf Green
Hot Buttered Rum
Bag of Tricks (featuring Zach Gill, Steve Adams and Dave Brogan of ALO)
The Mother Hips
Blue Turtle Seduction
New Monsoon
Trevor Garrod
Counterclarkwise
Big Light
Papa Mali
Dave Brogan Band
Guitarmageddon
Sean Leahy
Nicki Bluhm and the Gramblers
Pimps of Joytime
Izabella
Poor Man’s Whiskey
Tracorum
Tistrya and Friends
Montana Slim
Smokedaddies

In it’s fourth year, Las Tortugas continues to build on its core ideal of active, joyous musical pleasure delivered by road tested pros, who often finds themselves collaborating in unique combinations here. A strong sense of community infuses Las Tortugas, with daily themes, special one-off sets (like TLG’s Trevor Garrod‘s annual Sunday morning solo performances), quality, reasonably priced food and a wonderfully immersive feel where costumes change on a daily basis and the players have as much fun as the attendees.

For Tickets and festival information visit here.

Check out JamBase’s rave for Las Tortugas III here.


Tea Leaf Green Tour

Tea Leaf Green “Around The Bend Tour”


Tea Leaf Green

While veering through some of the Summer’s hottest festivals, Tea Leaf Green has picked some spots to bring their rock ‘n’ roll prowess during their “Around the Bend Tour.” With stops in all corners of the U.S., Tea Leaf Green will be pulling through starting August 20 at San Diego’s Wave House, then to L.A.’s famed Troubadour on August 21, and finish the short California jaunt in San Francisco at Outside Lands Festival.

They’ll then head to the Northeast for stops in Troy, Syracuse, Buffalo, and Pittsburgh. The tour will end in the Southeast corner – with shows in Birmingham, Athens, Charlotte and finally Charleston – where the band wowed packed houses early in the year.

Tickets for Tea Leaf Green’s “Round the Bend Tour” are on sale now!

Fans purchasing two or more tickets through Tea Leaf Green’s Ticketing Page will become eligible to win the first run of a limited edition poster designed by Josh Clark — commemorating the band’s Summer Tour — which will also be signed by the band.

‘Round the Bend Tour

07.12.09 Masontown, WV @ All Good
07.24.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
07.25.09 Detroit Lakes, MN @ 10,000 Lakes Festival
08.07.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets

08.08.09 Denver, CO @ Dancin’ in the Streets (Late Night CounterClarkWise show)

08.14.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival
08.16.09 Ozark, AR @ Mulberry Mountain Harvest Festival (Saturday Late Night show)
08.20.09 San Diego, CA @ Wave House
08.21.09 Los Angeles, CA @ Troubadour
08.22.09 San Francisco, CA @ Cafe Du Nord (Trevor Garrod solo show w/ Big Light)
08.28.09 San Francisco, CA @ Outside Lands Festival
09.02.09 Troy, NY @ Revolution Hall
09.03.09 Syracuse, NY @ Westcott Theatre
09.04.09 Buffalo, NY @ Erie Canal Harbor (w/ The Wallflowers)
09.05.09 Millvale, PA @ Mr. Smalls Theatre
09.09.09 Birmingham, AL @ WorkPlay Theater
09.10.09 Athens, GA @ 40 Watt
09.11.09 Charlotte, NC @ Neighborhood Theatre
09.12.09 Charleston, SC @ The Pour House w/ Gaslight Street

Purchase tickets and learn more about the contest through Tea Leaf Green ticketing here.



High Sierra Additions: Salmon, Slip, AOD, DeVotchKa

ONE OF THE SUMMER’S SWELLEST GATHERINGS SWELLS

Marc Friedman (Slip/Davis) :: HSMF ’08 :: by Scott Galbraith

The 2009 High Sierra Music Festival, taking place Thursday, July 2 – Sunday, July 5, 2009 in Quincy, CA, has announced the following additions to this year’s lineup:

DeVotchKa
Leftover Salmon
Greensky Bluegrass
Delhi 2 Dublin
Orchard Lounge
Assembly of Dust
The Slip
Surprise Me Mr. Davis
These United States
Red Cortez

Big Light
Lubriphonic
Zach Gill (special kids show)
Alice DiMicele & Friends

Paper Bird
Izabella
Bourgeois Gypsies
Raina Rose
Loyd Family Players

These artists join the already announced initial lineup:

John Butler

Umphrey’s McGee

Ani DiFranco

Disco Biscuits

Galactic

The Del McCoury Band

Steve Kimock Crazy Engine feat. Melvin Seals

The Wailers

Tea Leaf Green

Ollabelle

Mike Farris and the Roseland Rhythm Revue

ALO

Vieux Farka Toure

Dr. Dog

Devil Makes Three

The Travelin’ McCourys

The Lee Boys

Cornmeal

Bonerama

Marco Benevento Trio

McTuff feat. Skerik, Joe Doria, Andy Coe & D’Vonne Lewis

Skerik will also appear as an artist-at-large

Joe Craven and Sam Bevan Duo

Joe Craven will also appear as artist-at-large and emcee

Nathan Moore

Fareed Haque and The Flat Earth Ensemble

Pretty Lights

Everest

Dusty Rhodes and the River Band

Pimps of Joytime

J-Boogie and Dubtronic Science

Poor Man’s Whiskey

Living Folklore